THE MICHIGAN DAILY MICHIGAN DAILY A ~S I .,. _ "' -" ' I . 14<,- --TD( L0A' O.IT ygTpPUAToU 7 w m Mtrcrrrwy nxu E.........., . 1'uoished every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Sessiou by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. oriated tdlle inte i resz 1933 NatIoxNL .'cofreaac)1934 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use i republication of all news dispathces credited to it or ,ist otherwise credited in thi. paper and the local news prulshed herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. aitered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as S cond Class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third A istant Postmaster-General. - Subscrption during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, #.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mai, $4.25. Offices: Student Publicat;'ns Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: Colege Publications Representaties. Inc., 4G East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 B yison Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR .........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN CITY EDITOR......... ...........BACKL&Y SHAW EDITORIAL DIRECT OR ............. C. HART SCHAAF SPORTS EDTOR....... ......... LBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR .................CAROL J. HANAN EIGHT EDITORS: A. Eu Ball, Ralph G. Coulter. William . IFerris, John C, Healcy, George Van Vieck, E. Jerome .. Pttit, 6PORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Arthur W. Car- stens, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Beck, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPORTERS: C. Bradford. Carpenter, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaherty, Thomas A. Groehn, John Kerr, Thomas H. Kleene, Bernard B. Levick, David G. MacDonald, Joel P. Newman, John M. O'Connell, Kenneth Parker, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Arthur S. Settle, Jacob C, Seidel, Marshall D. Silverman, Arthur M. Taub. Dorothy Gies; Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, Marjorie Mor- rison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER ............BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ..................... . ......,......... CATHARINE MO HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Noel Tur- ner; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circula- tion and Contracts, Jack Efroymson. 4SSISTANTS: Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Ros- enthal, Joe Rothbard, George Atherton. Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Virginia Cluff, Patricia Daly, Genevieve Field, Louise Fiorez, Doris GimmyB etty Greve, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Louise Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret Mustard, Betty Si nondb. FRESHMAN TRYOUTS: William Jackson, Louis Gold- smith, David Schiffer, William Barndt, Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Robert Owen, Ted Wohgemuth, Jerome Grossman, Avn'r, Kronenberger, Jim Horiskey, Tom Clarke, Scott, Samuel Beckman, Homer Lathrop, Hall, Ross Levin, Willy Tomlinson, Dean Asselin, Lyman Bittman, John Park, Don Hutton, Allen Ulpson, Richard Hardenbrook, Gordon Cohn. NIGHT EDITOR : E. JEROME PETTIT The Sunmier Session.* SINCE THE TIME, 41 years ago, when gardeners and repair-men furnished the only activities on the campus dur- ing the summer, the Summer Session of the University has grown to one of the most justly faiftous and popular schools in the country. The staff for the Summer Session numbers more than 400 members, including as many as 40 promi- nent educators from other institutions in this country and abroad. Approximately 700 courses will be offered by this faculty. One of the most popular features of the Summer Session is the extensive program of social and extra-curricular activities which is made available to all students. Among the special events on this program are a series of excursions, concerts by the faculty of the School of Music and by the band, a series of plays extending throughout the session, a series of public lectures by prominent faculty members, social nights at the League, and opportunity for participation in sports, for which the use of automobiles is allowed. In addition to the instruction given in Ann Arbor, special courses are offered each year at the four summer camps of the University. These are Camp Davis, the oldest camp in the country for students of surveying, now located near Jack- son, Wyoming; the Biological Station on Douglas lake near Cheboygan with opportunities for indi- vidual research as well as class instruction; the Field Station for Geology and Geography at Mill Springs, Ky.; and Camp Filibert Roth for for- estry students in the Upper Peninsula near Mu- nising. From the financial standpoint, attendance at the Summer Session has definite attractions. Rooming house rates are much lower than during the college year. Railroad rates to and from the session have been reduced one third for students and faculty members. Fees for the 1934 Summer Session are on the same low basis as last year. To the Summer Session come students and teachers from 48 states and as many as 30 foreign countries. When you read the catalogue, or talk to someone who has attended it, you understand why. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be con- strued as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked.to be brief. confining themselves to less iI mentary interviews, held at different times, does not support the headlines. I endeavored to state only the constitutional protection of the rights of assemblage and of freedom of speech, and to state the limitations upon both rights. I did not defend the police action on May Day, for I do not know what the students did and what the police did. In substance, I said that the police had a right to prevent the holding of a public meeting where it would cause dangerous conges- tion of traffic or conduce to unlawful conduct. I do not know that the students were guilty of un- lawful conduct, and I should be one of the first to condemn wrongful use of force and of coarse brutality by the police. Dean Henry M. Bates. To The Editor: When certain members of the student body "smirch" the name of the University of Michigan by embroilments with the police (the recent skir- mish with the Vulcans) rarely, if ever, are these students called before an arbitrarily selected non- representative body of faculty members and stu- dents "to be investigated." And rightly so. I think these matters concern the student alone. But when students, who are not content to re- main isolated from the forces in society which are making for a change in our avowedly bankrupt social order, and go to the scene of conflict, to life itself, abuse and invective are piled on from all sides. Not only violations of rights of free speech, as- semblage, etc., were committed by our alleged upholders of the law, but physical violence, as evi- denced by a broken blackjack (now in our posses- sion), was used. Profanity; confiscation of song books, destruction of banners, and separation of the students from their hired truck are only inci- dentals when we consider the principles involved. We students have lost many illusions in the past four years. We already know what to expect from the "Kept Press." But surely, from our own campus paper we did not and should not expect the treat- ment accoided participants on the trip. A small list includes a plea for expulsion,' distortion of facts, and sidetracking discussion from the prin- ciples involved of brutality, free speech, etc., to whether we "stick by our guns." 'Finally, the credit should be given to those de- partments, (Sociology, etc.) individual professors, and instructors who at least gave us moral support; the acts of the administration are to be condemned. Yielding to the sensationalism of metropolitan headlines (which sold out their papers completely in Ann Arbor for three days) of "Students Face Expulsion," "Investigation to be Launched," an investigation was begun. Probably the worst infringement on our rights as students to go where we pleased was this in- vestigation. It was conducted behind closed doors, asecretary taking complete notes, the committee non-representative of general student opinion. It has all the characteristics of a medieval inquisition. Questions as to political beliefs, purpose in going, affiliations, communist, socialist, Vanguard Club, National Student League, fraternity, etc., seemed to bear pertinently on the subject. I would have refused to testify unless the meet- ing was open to the public and all participants were invited to be present. By what right did the, committee summon these students at 1:30 and keep them in an anteroom waiting for hours while others were put through a virtual third degree for as long as forty-five minutes? This trip was no "lark" as it has been called. Nor do we merit the laughter and ridicule recom- mended by Dean Henry A. Bates in the May 6 issue of the Michigan Daily. It is a symptom of a decaying and dying system when mass meetings are bared. To think in 1928 that a truck of 42 students and three private cars. from Ann Arbor to Detroit would result in front page headlines for three days is out of the question. The fright of officials show they fear our finding out things for ourselves. I suppose that's why books are written for us; but somehow I feel this trip taught us more than many a 4 year course in the University of Michigan in 1934. Karl Cannon, Secretary National Student League. To the Editor: With the admirable clearness of the legal minded,1 Dean Henry M. Bates of the University Law School; argues, in The Daily of May 6, that Mayor Frank Couzens of Detroit had a valid reason for prohibit- ing a worker's parade and demonstration in that city on May i, because "it was obvious that violence was likely to result," Eighty-seven worker's organizations wished to parade and demonstrate. It should be pointed out that any violence which was likely to have occurred would have been between workers and police, be- tween workers groups themselves, or between workers and non - workers. There would have been no violence between workers groups because it was a successful united May Day front. There are no civilian oppositions to workers groups in Detroit that would have used extra-legal means to suppress labor demonstrations. Therefore the only possibility of the "violence that was likely to re- sult" would have been between the workers and the police, and for the sole reason that the police had orders not to allow the parade and demonstration to take place, and to use all means to break it up. In brief if the parade had not been prohibited, no violence would have been potentially possible. That no violence occurred in Grand Circus Park' or Clark Park on May Day afternoon does not seem to have been the fault of the Detroit police administration. Every other "worker" was a plain- clothes man. The air was blue with policemen. The working class leaders very rightly decided that, in the interests of public peace they had better not tamper with this potentially violent mob of cops. Despite the opinion of Dean Bates, it seems necessary to conclude that the right of assembly is involved, for, had there been no order restraining the people from parading, no violence would likely have resulted. Davis Hobbs, '35L. Maurice J. Wilsie. Grad. Screen Reflections AT THE MICHIGAN "BOTTOMS UP" Smoothy ...................Lee Tracy Wand ..................Pat Patterson Hal ........................John Boles This is another musical picture, but it is better than the average of its type because of the fol- lowing reasons; the presence of a new, fresh, charming leading lady, Pat Patterson, the hilarious character 6f the comedy, and the restraint shown in presenting the musical numbers. The cast is also noteworthy, having among its members the volup- tuous Thelma Todd, the volcanic Harry Green, and the very blank Sid Silvers. The story is the cinderella one which concerns itself with having the little girl make good in the big city. The city is Hollywood, and the manner in which she achieves her success is the basis for the entertaining situations. She is skyrocketed to fame by means of a sheer veneer of amusing bluffing ot the part of her chance acquaintance, Smoothy aind two of his questionably honest, but unquestionably entertaining pals. These three rollick through the picture, polishing it with a lightness that no picture of this type could be without. Miss Patterson and Mr. Boles take care of the more serious parts of the picture, which are well-related to the character of the whole thing. The musical numbers ("Turn on the Moon," and "Waiting at the Gate for Katie") have been woven into the story with considerablly more smoothness than is found in most musical pic- tures. "Bottoms Up" is altogether a successfully entertaining picture. -C.B.C. 0leglate Observer By BUD BERNARD An ex-junior at LaSalle College now a student at the University of Besancon, France writes that contrary to popular belief, French dates are not so hot. Going to a cafe recently to meet a girl, he found that she had brought both her parents along. Perhaps they were hungry too. Even Frenchmen have to eat now and then. Here's a poem? coming from a poor little co-ed at Northwestern University: How sweet the co-ed! How true! How brave! Who will kiss a man When he needs a shave! v : a And here are another columnist's pet peeves re- garding women, voiced in the University of Wash- ington paper: Women who look like a parenthesis mark when they dance; who sing in the ears of their dates; who wipe off excess lipstick on the collars of unsuspecting males; who talk about all their other dates; who pluck their eyebrows un- evenly; who wear mascara which runs; who ap- pear in sweaters which are too short; who affect violently colored fingernails and freshly set hair with a varnished look; who pull up their hose in public or chew gum at dances. The critic closes by admitting that women however are a necessary evil. * * . Here's a quip coming from a kappa at the University of Wisconsin: - Male students are degenerating in the dust while the co-eds are broadening above the waste. in itself if separated from the conditions in De- troit that gave it importance and news value. (2.) These conditions in Detroit were: The denial of the civil liberty of "free assemblage." The marking off of the proletariat as unfit to demonstrate. The unnecessary provocation of trouble by massing armed policemen in the city. (I feel cer- that that if Watkins had been Police Commissioner an entirely different policy would have been used). In my mind these are the crucial issues that should be discussed by thinking citizens and students; not the truck and the personalities in it. (3.) I consider the action of the police both unwise and unnecessary. Although respecting the fact that they were under orders to prevent demon- strations, yet I would protest their roughness and terrorism methods. (4.) However, the students that went to Detroit should have been expecting trouble and should take it like men. Conditions in Detroit were well known in advance. Regarding Subsequent Developments- (1.) I brand as almost dishonest and cowardly the attitude of some, if even a few, that went to Detroit who now say it was merely an educational and sociological trip. This profession now assumed in spite of the provocative mimeographed state- ment, "To You Students Who Think," which was distributed widely on the Campus on April 31, is in- defensible, it seems to me, and greatly compromises their position. Further, it certainly will not increase the working man's confidence in student stability and leadership to learn that the student May Day Demonstration was merely a harmless educational jaunt. (2.) The statement "Much Ado About Nothing" will do much more harm than good. In the first place I do not agree that the whole situation was 'nothing', as I have indicated. Secondly, it greatly stretches the truth in presenting the incident as merely educational. (3.) The honest and courageous thing for the number of socialist and communist students that went to Detroit to do is to state their convictions regarding labor and its cause and then take their medicine like men. (4.) TheĀ° attitude and conduct of The Michigan Daily throughout this affair has been both unin- telligent and poor journalistically. It has dealt in ftrms of nbernnalities inster Af issin Altholugh MAY- ,. , FESTIVAL MAY 9, 10, 11, 12 Artists ]esides mnany styles of beautiful cards for one's own mother, there are also many in our stock for the "Mother of my Sweetheart"MyOther Mother"My ister on Mother's Da/and so on, You will derive much pleasure in sending these messages on Mother's Day and think too of the 'oy you dive to oters. Also MOTHER'S DAY POSTAGE STAMPS OD.Morrill 314 South State St. GREETING CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONS LUCREZIA BORI .....Soprano ROSA PONSELLE .. ..Soprano JEANNETTE VREELAND... .Soprano COE GLADE ........ Contralto PAUL ALTHOUSE ...... Tenor ARTHUR HACKETT ... Tenor THEODORE WEBB. Baritone CHASE BAROMEO......Bass GUILA BUSTABO.. . .Violinist MISCHA LEVITZKI.. .Pianist MABEL ROSS RHEAD...... ..............Accompanist PALMER CHRISTIAN Organist Organizations THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION...............30 Voices THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ... . .........70 Players YOUNG PEOPLE'S FESTIVAL CHORUS........... . ..400 Voices THE STANLEY CHORUS...... . ....................Women Choral W orks SONG OF PEACE (Ein Friedenslied) ...............Robert Heger -.NINTH SYMPHONY................ . . .. . . .........Beethoven THE SEASONS.... . ............ .... ....... ........Haydn THE UGLY DUCKLING ..... . ...........................English BY THE RUINS OF BABYLON ... . ......... . ......Loeffler Conductors EARL V. MOORE . ..............................Musical Director FREDERICK STOCK...................Orchestra Conductor ERIC DeLAMARTER ............ ... ......Associate Conductor JUVA HIGBEE ......... . .............Young People's Conductor P ROG RAMS I. WEDNESDAY EVENING, 8:15 ROSA PONSELLE, Soprano CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor Prelude and Fugue ("St. Anne's") E-flat major ..........Bach-Stock Aria, "Bel Raggio Lusinghier," ("Semiramide")............Rossini MISS PONSELLE La Mer (The Sea) ........ ....................................Debussy From Dawn to Noon at Sea Gambols of the Waves Dialogue Between the Wind and Sea Arias, "Adio del Passato" (La Traviata")...... ............ . .Verdi "Chanson Boheme" ("Carmen")......................Bizet MISS PONSELLE Rapsodie Espagnole..........................................+.Ravel Songs with Piano: Freschi LUoghi Prati Aulenti ...................Stefano Donaudy Marietta's Lied from "Die Tote Stadt"..........Erich Korngold Respetto........................................E. Wolf-Ferrari Si Tu Le Voulais................................F. Paolo Tosti My Lover He Comes on a Ski .....................Clough-Leighter ROSA PONSELLE Mr. Stuart Ross at the Piano II. THURSDAY EVENING, 8:15 JEANNETTE VREELAND, Soprano MISCHA LEVITSKI Pianist PAUL ALTHOUSE, Tenor PALMER CHRISTIAN, Organist CHASE BAROMEO, Bass UNIVERSITY CORAL UNION CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA EARL V. MOORE and FREDERICK STOCK, Conductors 'The Seasons" ..............................................Haydn An Oratorio for Soprano, Tenor, and Bass Soli, Mixed Chorus, Orchestra, and Organ MISS VREELAND, Messrs. ALTHOUSE and BAROMEO and the UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION Concerto in G minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 22 ....Saint-Saens Andante sostenuto Allegro scherzando Presto II1. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30 GUILA BUSTABO, Violinist ERIC DE LAMARTER and YOUNG PEOPLE'S CHORUS JUVA HIGBEE, Conductors STANLEY CHORUS Allegro from Concerta No. 2 in F major for Trumpet ana Strings ("Brandenberg")....................................Bach Songs: On Wings of Song........... . -......................Mendelssohn Hledge Roses .........................................Schu.brt' Blue Danube Waltz ........... . . .J. Strauss YOUNG PEOPLE'S CHORUS Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso for Violin and Orchestra, IntOp2 ...........Saint-Saens Op. 28...-..-....----GUILA BUSTABO Cantata, "The Ugly Duckling"A...............English YOUNG PEOPLE'S CHORUS. ih First Symphony ....................... .... .......... .... .... Milhaud By the Waters of Babylon... ..... .....Loeffler THE STANLEY CHORUS Andante and Rondo-Allegro from "Symphony Espagnole" for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 21.............................Lalo MISS BUSTABO IV. FRIDAY EVENING, 8:15 LUCREZIA BORI. Soprano CHICAGO SYPMPHONY ORCHESTRA FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor Fantasie. "A Night on a Bare Mountain"...........Moussorgsky Aria, "Voi che sapete" ..... ..-.....-".--..-Mozart LUCREZIA BORI Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98 ...........................Brahms Recitative and Aria of Lia ("L'Enfant Prodigue") ............Debussy MISS BORI "Sailor's Dance" ("Pavot Rouge")...........................Gliere Aria, "Depuis le Jour" ("Louise").. . . ..... . ............harpentler MISS BORI V. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30 JEANNETTE VREELAND, Soprano THEODORE WEBB, Bass COEAGLADE, Contralto UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION ARTHUR HACKETT, Tenor CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor Overture to "Cariolanus," Op. 62 ................ ......Beethoven Symphony No. 9, in D minor, Op. 125 .......................Beethoven MISS VREELAND, MISS GLADE. MR. IACKETT AND MR. WEBB UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION Tone Poem, "Ein Heldenleben," Op. 40.........................Strauss The Hero The Hero's Adversaries The Hero's Companion The Hero's Battlefield The Hero's Mission of Peace The Hero's Escape from the World -- ConbCusloln VI. SATURDAY EVENING, 8:15 JEANNETTE VREELAND, Soprano CHASE BAROMEO, Bass COE GLADE, Contralto PALMER CHRISTIAN. Organist" PATTT. ATTTOTTSE Tenor UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION The Advantageous Results of Classified- Advertising, have been proven If you have a Thesis to be Typed .. . or If you are Ty ingtheses Advertise through t The Daily Classifieds . Cash Rates lica Line The Michigan Daily Maynard Street Read The DAILY CLASSIFIED