THE. MICTI GAN DAILY SATt IGAN DAILY :I " V M . war. One may add, that such duty devolves equally upon every citizen, male and female. In the course of his well thought out argument Lt. - McDonald makes some minor points which per- haps would better have been omitted-such as the possibility of an officer's increasing his chances of coming back alive, that an officer learns how to handle men, that an officer earns $200 (a month) and that, in case of war, he will be an officer and will have some idea of what'it is all about (comment: but will he?k. These points are quite extraneous to the real question, which is: "Are there valid reasons for the ex- istence of the R.O.T.C.? The present writer is of the opinion that there are valid reasons. Such being the case, the organization can stand on its own feet and does not need any artificial props such as the points made by Lt. McDonald. There is one thing I should urge in this con- . nection, viz., That joining the R.O.T.C be not made compulsory in schools and colleges. ion - M. Levi, Professor Emeritus Established 1890 every morning except Monday° during1 ar'and Summer Session by the Board ident Publications. ,he Western Conference Editorial Assoclat m News Service. $soriatd {olciteadrSS MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th.Asoiated Press s nclllsively entitled to the use r rpyibli ation of all'news .dispathes credited to it or ot otherwise gredit n ths paper nd 'the local news >ullished herein. Al rights of republication of special lispatches are reserved. Entered .at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as eond class matter. Special rate of postage granted by [l'h #Assitant Postmaster-General- 8ubscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, 1. 0, During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by na.i, $4.25. Ofices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, im Arbor, Michigan. Phone; 2-1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, #nc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 3ylson Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, icago. A, 'EJW(flRJALSTAFF eephone 95 0ANAOI .EDITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN CI3IT R . .. .. ..BRACKLEY SHAW TO!L DIRECTOR.... ..... ...C HARTSCHAAF RTB EDITO...............ALBERT H. NEWMAN ItAMA EDITOR...,OHN W. PRITCHARD W.OMEWS EDITOR .............CAROL J. HANAN G~HT E TORS: A. Elis al, Ralph O. Coulter, Willam Derr s, JoinC. eley, George Van Vieck, Guy M. WhppI, Jr. UPQUTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Arthur W. Car- stens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western NOMLEN'S ASSISTANTS: Marjorpe Beck, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. EPQRUTER: Q. Bradford Carpenter, Ogden G. Dwight, Pal J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Thomas E. Oroehn., Joh 1Kerr, Thomas H. Kleene, Rihard E. Lorch, David G. iMacdnald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parkr, Wil "am R. Reed, Robert . Ruwitch, Robert ., t. Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A 9Lhur M. Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie " 0d, leanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, rueyre arrison, Say rPlace, Rosalie Resnick, Kathryn ' letdyk, Jane Schneider. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BU8INE8S MANAGER..........W. GRAFTON SHARP 3REDIT MANAGER ...BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER................. ............. ......CATHARINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her-- trick; assified Advertising, Russell Read;vAdvertising ~ Contracts, Jack Bellamy; 'Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Acounts, Allen Knuus; Circulation, Jack Ef- rrsymsoni. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- mer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, David Winkworth. Ia e Bassett Virginia Bell, Mary ursley, Peggy Cady, Virginia Cluff, Patricia Dly, Genevieve Field, Louise Florez, Doris Gimmy, Betty Greve, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson,, Louise Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret Mustard, Betty Simonds. NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM G. FERRIS Farewell To Huey Long..9 T HE HUEY LONG dynasty in Louis- iana is at an end. Tuesday's pri- mary for mayor of New Orleans, in which the anti-Long c a n d i d a t e, incumbent T. Hemmes Walmsley, defeated John Klorer, Long candidate, by nearly two-to-one, completes the disintergra- tQIOn of the Kingfish machine. The Long future is definitely downward. Long was another of those phenomoma that the American democracy sometimes spews out of the ballot box. He came from the back woods via the barn and the alley pool room. He was a big boy; loud, pugnacious, coarse, conceited, a bad man to meet when he had five drinks under his belt on a Saturday night. This type of man al- ways make an appeal to his kind. They like his rawness. They like to see him standing on the soap box, crying to high heaven against the rich and the mighty. He is their man, all theirs, and they go to the polls in moronic droves to put their X's next to his name, for he is their idol and their hope. He is "one of our kind of folks." This type of man always disappoints his fol- lowers. There is nothing he can do but talk. He has no intelligence, no background, no responsi- bility. He makes a noise and calls it action. The office is for him a splendid opportunity to swash-. buckle his way through the front pages, the ro- togravure sections, and the news reels -always bawling his own name, eternally patting his own back. And underneath this effontery there is the loot of office which neither he nor his satellites ignore. The pubic gets on to him after a while. The decent citizenry is at first shocked, then mad. It goes after him. He bellows his defiance, but the steady disapproval of public opinion wears him down. His followers, disillusioned, desert him. He is left alone with his vapid folly: "Long is se- questered in his hotel room as numerous lesser leaders are deserting him. The senator is re- ported to be in a surly mood." Huey Long is on the way back to the grass roots; where he came from and where he belongs. To the Editor: - The observation of "A Good American" in Campus Opinion recently, while terribly written and in parts utterly senseless, shows nevertheless that our controversy over R.O.T.C. or campus military training is at least opinionated on both sides. Yet neither group has presented a com- pletely sound stand for or against the aboli- tion of RO.T.C units. As Prof. Slosson suggests, it is to be hoped that students will come to formu- late opinions, if they do not now, and to expressly maintain them until they are proven erroneous Yet it must be said that there are some of us who would like to see these opinions based on sound reasoning, and observed facts. For the great majority of students the whole matter probably has become a bore, for most stu- dents are indifferent to the question. There are two other groups of students: the men in the R.O.T.C. or those for its maintenance, and those against it. The group which now so loudly at- tacks R.O.TC. consists undoubtedly of the small- est number. Nevertheless, if either side of our controversy has anything sensible to say it would be of interest, for a change, to many of the stu- dent body. -- R. L. Kimball The" Theattre MAX REINHARDT TO BE AT ORCHESTRA HALL JAN. 21 PREDICTED by Pavlowa to become the great dance star of the world, Nini Theilade, Max Reinhardt's premiere danseuse, is to dance at Orchestra Hall in Detroit Wednesday evening Jan- uary 21, under the auspicious of the Detroit Town Hall Series Mlle. Theilade is only 18. At 14, when she was studying under Madame Ergerowa, at one time prima ballerina of the St. Petersburg ballet, Pav- lowa saw her dance. Greatly moved by her per- formance she turned to her companions and said. "I am the present. This child is the future. People talk of me now. In the future they will talk of her." It was Pavlowa who arranged for Nini's Euro- pean debut at the Hague - an appearance which was followed by a tour of Germany, Switzerland, Holland, and Scandinavia. When Max Reinhardt saw her dance in Stock- holm, he immediately invited her to join his com- pany. She has been his premiere danseuse in his last four big European productions. Emile Vuillermoz, writing of her first Paris per- formance, said in "Excelsior", "It is evident that in her we have found one destined to become a great luminous star of the dance. Undoubtedly we shall regard her tomorrow as one of our most cherished and precious artists." The Paris Soir re- ported. "The whole press salutes this great new discovery. Her art is amazing." In her recitals, Ni*$ Theilade mixes classic with the modern school. She dances to the music of Grieg, Chopin, Mozart, Debussy, Albeniz, Brahms, Liszt, Mendelssohn, Delibes. She has created almost all of her own dances. Rare racial strains mingle in Theilade's blood. She was born in Java and lived there until she was nine, when her family moved to Denmark. Her mother is a Hindu from the ruling caste of Java and the granddaughter of an ex-Sultan of Java. Her father is a Danish journalist, who through two generations of Danish clergymen was descended from the French Admiral H. Thaylade. Nini Theilade's performances, originally sched- uled for the morning of Jan. 31 at the Wilson Theatre, was changed to Wednesday evening at Orchestra Hall, because of the unusual interest. ir her Detroit debut. should be dedicated to the legion of his ruined victims. - St. Louis Post Dispatch THE SKIES HAVE CLEARED FOR MR. BRISBANE Long years ago William Randolph Hearst fell luckily upon the endless lode of newspaper-buyng pennies waiting for the man who would publish "a paper, for people who" can , conceivably "think," but who hate to be forced to when they're reading a paper. Following that rich vein further, he discovered that a pied piper who would lead the largest percentage of infant minds to the news stands must play only the simplest native air, to wit: America is the biggest, strongest, purest, all around dandiest place on earth. To him and to his Mr. Brisbane, then, the spec- tacular features of international news provide continual opportunities for wild bell ringing. Every evidence of superiority, every threat of strength by a foreign power is the occasion for deploring the puny ineffectiveness of an American army and navy which should be the strongest in the world. Vast was Mr. Brisbane's horror at the fact that Balbo and his fleet, however magnificent their feat of last summer, had proved that a for- eign squadron of bombers could swoop across the ocean and destroy New YFork in an hour. For Mr. Brisbane's respect for bombs and poison gas is far greater than his respect for his readers' minds. Now, at last, with the publication of his column- of yesterday throughout the country, America's fears for the comfort of its syndicated best friend may be laid at rest. With the arrival of the Amer- ican Naval Air squadron at Pearl Harbor Mr. Brisbane has at last cast off his possessing aero- phobia, he is able to announce that there is some hope. The flight, he says, is at least "a warning to any nation harboring foolish plans for attack- ing the United States now or later." And he wants it understood that we must have on hand, in case any foreign diplomat should grow ferociously in the belief that America's leading mode of trans- port is still the pony express, "five thousand planes that would visit every one of your cities quickly with explosive bombs and poison gas, if you were ever foolish enough to interfere with this peaceful country." This little matter attended to, Mr. Brisbane's timorous heart will cease its wild flutterings; and he can turn his "Today" column for "people who think" in words of one syllable over to nature but who hate to be forced to when they're study and kindred topics. The wild clattering of his tin sword will cease, his hectic cries of "gas, run for your lives" will fade into the distance, and there will be at last, in every sense of the word, a reasonable chance for peace. It seems almost worthwhile. - Daily Princetonian i Your Last Chance to Rent Those Vacant Rooms A Clas sifi ed Adt costs bui a few cents. A Vacant Room costs many dollars. LAST REGULAR ISSUE, JAN. 28 Classified Rates le a Line, Cash 14e a Line, Charge HE MICIGAN DAILY Ii l t F s e ,. :,_... ForII e Fut xrN a F E i' 1 t } Musical Events OPERA IN DETROIT THE Chcago Opera Company, (Inc.) will bei Detroit at the Wilson Theater for a fou week engagement, beginning Sunday night. Tb operas are being given at popular prices. The schedule for the week is: Sunday "La Boheme" .............Puccini Monday "Aida" ......................Verdi Tuesday "Faust" ..................Gounod Wednesday "Cavalliera Rustiacana" Mascagni "I Pagliaci........... Leoncavallo Thursday "Madam Butterfly" ......Puccini Friday "La Forza del Destino" .........Verdi Saturday: matinee "Hansel and Gretel" (in English) ..... ....Humperdinck Saturday evening "Il Trovatore" ....Verdi in [r- he a n 1 a e ! 1he Jdlop reserved] in, all {of 'is Ile Mchigyan Daily will publishaie- Lare of the Grand March in the J-Hop Extra .. . he Daily will also have for sale a lim- ited number of glossy prints of the ('a tid March (10"x 22"), ideal for On sale the night of the Hop at the Intramural Building and later at the Student Publications Building. ESE lYE YOURS NOW COllegiate Observer Phone 2-1214 r S h u a' 1 is As Others See It THE REFUGE THAT WAS GREECE With Edgar Allan Poe, it was "the glory that was Greece." With Samuel Insull, it is "the refuge that was Grreece." In Poe's case, it was a poet's impersonal regret for a golden wonder that had gone. In the case of Insull, it is the poignant despair of the dis- enchanted wanderer, against whom all the doors are closed, save the breeze-swept gates of Chi- cago. That statement may not be the precise fact, but it carries the impress of truth. For the highest court of Greece has declared Insull must go, and there is, practically speaking, no place to which he can turn but the country from which he is a fugitive The verdict was a foregone conclusion, after the similar ruling of the Minister of the Interior. So the battling, litigious visit in Attica, which has ,- .. t rc .. l a Ham a ifr niffn n +he f+5nnte By BUD BERNARD A Haverford University professor said that stu- lents striving for A, are barren of personality L while the C students are the salt of the earth. These are some of the things that the editor of the daily of the University of Kansas would like to hear: Our prof in a shay course saying: "Don't even bother taking the exam - you've got a cinched" . . . Galli Curci singing St. Louis Blues" . . . Joe E. Brown and Joe Penner shaking hands with each other and saying "You're good Joe," each in his own inimitable way . . . someone griping because semester exams don't come four times a year. The University of California will start a class in ballroom dancing for the masculine population of the school if enough of them make known their desire. We nominate this crack coming from The Daily Illini for the worst of the month -- The Italian gals fear Mussolini 'cause he's the Fascist man in Italy. A professor of Botany at Butler University has had his name included in the volumes of "Who's Who" since it has been published, yet he holds no college degree. Many a student who succeeds in the ap- proaching final exams will be the one who knows how to use both grammar and "cram- mer." At Northwestern University the secret is out. It has been discovered what the co-eds have been doing with their spare time: Due to the depres- sion and the lack of pin money they have been playing ping-pong. Tournaments are held monthly at the dormitories. S * * L First Methodist Episcopal Church A COMMUNITY CATHEDRAL State and washington Ministers Frederick B. Fisher Peter F. Stair 10:45-Morning Worship. Sermon Subject: "Religion Interviews Jesus" Dr. Stair, preaching STALKER HALLT For Uiiversity Students 12:15 -Seminar' on Applied Chris- tianity. "Jesus' Teaching on Wealth." 6:00-Guild Devotional service. Sher- wood Messner. President of the S.C.A., Will speak on "E-sential Considerations in a Christian Life." DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR Re-Acv iti-es 'I Zion Lutheran Church washington St. at 5th Ave. E. C. Stelnhorn, Pastor 9:00 a.m.-Bible School. Lesson topic: "The Life in Kingdor" 10:30 A.M. -Service with sermon on "Salvation By Grace" 5:30 P.M.-Student Fe11,wshp and Supper 5 :45 F.M. - Prof. S. A. Hopkins will address the Student Fellowship. RELIGIOUS ACTIVITIES D5, Campus Opinion -- - - - - - - ni . -.Hn':o-miii i -l' ha nn. St. Paul's Lutheran, (Missouri Synod) West Aberty and 'hlid Sts. -- Jan. 23 9:30 aan. - Church School. The Fellowship of Liberal Religion (Unitarian) State and Huron Streets St. Andrews Episcopal Church Division at Catherine Street Services of Worship Sunday, Jan. 28, 1934 8:00 A.M. - Holy Communion 11