THE MICHIGAN DAILY q DAILY ..- holding approval from, proposed plays on the campus as follows: "(1) The Dramatic Committee (a sub-commit- tee of the Committee on Student Affairs) of which Professor H. A. Kenyon is chairman, has the initial responsibility for passing upon plays to be given by student organizations (Comedy Club, Mimes, Hillel Players, etc.). The actions of the Dramatic Committee are, of course, reported to the Committee on Theatre Policy and Practice and are subject to its review. Professor Kenyon is a member of the Committee on Theatre Policy El and Practice. f ' - _ ~DcVfU.o51MN s . w.. " gyp, - 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 Association and the Big Ten News Service. ssociated 0011eninte -m-- ofo - I1g 3 QWii~ryoruT";- l oveIace 13f_4 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCTATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispathees credited to it or not otherwise credited in thi; paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the ost Office at Ann Arbor, Michtgan, as second class matter. Special rate of postagf granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00: by mall, $1,.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75, by mail-, $4.25. Offices:"Student Publlcatics BIlding, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, .Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Tne., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylson Street, Boston: 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFFI Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.......... THOMAS K. CONNELLANl CEDITOR IRO.............,...BRAC IKLEY ShAW EDIORIAL DIRECOR............C. 1ART SCHAAF SPORTS EDITOR............ ...ALBERT H. NEWMAN DRAMA EDITOR ............ ....JOHN W. PR[TCHARDJ WOMEN'S EDITOR.....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph C Coulter, William 0. Ferris Jolt C. Healf-, George Van VIeek, Guy M. Whiipple, Jr. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. fa'ird, Arthur W. Car- stens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Beck, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan.- REPORTERS: C. Bradford Carpenter, Ogden G. Dwight, pai , . 'lliott, Courtney A. Evans, Thomas F ,roehn, Jahn Kerr, Thomas H. Kleene, itchard E. Lorob, Davia C. Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, Wit- 31am R. Reed, Robert. S. Ruwitch, Robert .. St Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, Arthur M. "(2) The initial responsibility for approving plays to be given by Play Production, (which is not a student organization but a curricular ac- tivity of the University of Michigan itself) has been delegated to me. I, of course, report actions taken under this delegated authority to the whole Committee, and such actions are subject to the review of the Committee. "(3) The approval of all other dramatic per- formances on the campus (as, for instance, the plays given in Mr. Henderson's dramatic season) 1 in the hands of the Committee on Theater Policy and Practice as a whole. "I can recall no instance in which I have had occasion to withhold approval from a play which Mr. Windt wanted to produce. We have occasion- ally together considered a play and have both ar- rived at the same conclusion - that it would be better for Play Production not to produce a play which we have thus considered. I am under the impression that Mr. Windt's conception of the functions of censorship, and the basis upon which plays should be approved or disapproved, and my thought on these matters are substantically identical. "I believe that censorship as organized at the University of Michigan and in other American colleges and universities is unavoidable. However, that is a question for the Faculty or the Regents and not for me nor for the Theatre Committee itself. I suppose that differences of opinion in regard to the manner in which any play should be cut are likewise unavoidable. When the play "See Naples and Die" was submitted, as a part of the regular routine, since it is a play which I had not either seen or read, it had already been cut by Mr. Windt or Mr. Doll or both. It seemed to me, as I read the play, that the cutting had been. very well done, and I approved the play as cut. I would not have approved the play without some cutting. Whether I should have approved it with other or less cutting I do not know. "Your open letter on censorship is an excellent one, and one with the general principles of which I am in full agreement. I am sure it is being read by all members of the committee with apprecia- tion of its courtesy and understanding. I shall be glad to bring up at the next meeting of the committee the matter of University censorship as discussed in your open letter in the Michigan Daily and in this letter. Very sincerely yours, J. M. O'NEILL, Chairman Committee on Theatre Policy and Practice." As Others See It DESTITUTION IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL Speaking to the people of his home State at Lincoln Thursday night, Senator Norris of Ne- braska paid a moving tribute to President Roose- velt and pleaded for a "higher civilization in which we forget about the unconstitutionality of every suggestion that comes along for the relief of suf- fering humanity." The speech may be dismissed by some as "sen- timental." Admittedly, there was emotion in his judgment that the President is "the greatest leader the nation has ever had." And the dream of a day when selfishness will have been eradi- cated may be looked upon as visionary. Yet we are enjoined to remember that "where there is no vision the people perish," and, groping as we now are through the agonizing difficulties into which we have been plunged by a reckless, ram- pant selfishness, many of us are disposed to lend a readier ear to the ancient injunction. Anyhow, we can understand the personal en- thusiasm of Nebraska's elder statesman for the President, and we may even catch a glimpse of his faith in the fairer order of things he so earnestly preaches. He has been preaching it and fighting for it all the long span of his public life. Always, until now, the odds have been against him. More than once, in sheer discouragement, he has been tempted to abandon the struggle for justice as hopeless. Now he has found at the head of the Goverment a fellow-believer, who is dedicating his authority and power, in the press of tremen- dous circumstances, to the cause of the popular welfare - to the social and economic resurrec- tion of the forgotten man. For George W. Norris the experience, One may venture, is a revelation. Whether Mr. Roosevelt will succeed in what we all recognize as one of the decisive battles of his- tory is, as Mr. Norris sees it, debatable. But, fail- ure or success, it is an epic effort. The sheer gal- lantry of it challenges not only tolerance but leniency of judgment. Mistakes have been made and will unavoidably be made. They will be cor- rected. Plans will go awry. They will be dropped. Men trusted with high commissions will prove Un- worthy. They will be exposed and removed, and partisan expediency will not avail them. By all those signs and tokens, by the stature of his char- acter and purpose, the President is awarded the superlative of Mr. Norris' esteem. Can we go on with the philosophy that would chart the way to the Utopian attainment of un- selfishness? If that is too far a voyage for poor mortal flesh to undertake, perhaps it would seem less impracticably distant if we named the des- tination enlightened selfishness. To that we really must point the prow. It is not optional. It is mandatory. The preacher of that gospel is today the truly practical man. The dissenter is the visionary. The distribution of the returns of labor indispensable to the maintenance and survival of our civilization can never be compassed by code or legal process or regulation. Its consummation demands a h u m a n i t a r i a n i s m which can be achieved only when powered by the dynamo of enlightened selfishness which, after al, is the twin brother of unselfishness. Finally, there is one attitude toward the prob- lems of the hour, commended by Senator Norris, which we can adopt, and, for the most part, we believe, have adopted. We can thrust aside the legalistic caution which, here and there, is urging us to weigh the constitutionality of every measure proposed for the relief of anguish and despair. We agree with Senator Norris, unreservedly, that destitution in America is intolerable, a reproach to our national credo and career. If the philoso- phy of Franklin Roosevelt could be stated in a phrase, it would read, we believe: Destitution in America is unconstitutional. In that sign we shall conquer. I -F Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie ed Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine Mclean, Marlorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Kathryn ietdyk, Jane Schneider. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 vNES MAA ERW.......E.W GRAFTON SHARP US ITIvANAGE ......BERNARD E. SONACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER................. ...............CATHARINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trek; assied Adversing Russell Read: Advertising GCotracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- Jeer. :John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, Jamies Scott, David Winkworth. Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Virginia Cluff, Patricia Daly, Genevieve Field, Louise Florez, Doris Gimmy, Betty Greve, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Louise .Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret M ustard, Betty Sininds, NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN C. HEALEY Decline Of Dolifuss ... R ECENT events in Austria have done much to discredit Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss in the eyes of the world. The man who was pictured in the public mind as the little giant defending his country against the ag- gression of Nazi Germany revealed himself in a new light when he proceeded to outlaw the Social- ist party, the party which had in the last parlia- mentary election represented more voters than any other group to oust the popularly-elected Socialist governments of Vienna and other cities, and to de- stroy the workers' apartment buildings in Vienna which were the most advanced worers' homes in the world, at the same time murdering many Austrian citizens including women and children. Even the oft-denounced Nazis in Germany did not go to the length in accomplishing their revo- lution that the Fascist Heimwehr did in Austria. The Austrian people could not be blamed now for deserting the Anshluss more than a government under Dollfuss and the Heimwehr. The recent occurrence in Vienna resembles in a way the method to which Gerardo Machado resorted in Cuba when he saw his tyrannical power crumbling. It shows the lengths to which a dictatorship will go when it is threatened. Dollfuss will lose even more respect when it is rembered that he chose to ally himself with the Socialists when that seemed to be the best course, and that he did not have the courage to be in Vienna when the Fascist coup was carried out. The Heimwehr at least cannot be accused of duplicity and cowardice. Dollfuss can. One of the most progressive Socialist organizations in Europe has almost been destroyed by the force of arms, and Austria is nearer to the Anschluss than ever. PROFESSOR O'NEILL REPLIES TO LETTER ON CENSORSHIP DRAMATIC CENSORSHIP by the University1 was criticized Sunday in this column, in an open letter addressed to the Theatre Committee. [n response to a request by The Daily, Prof. J. M. O'Neill, chairman of the committee, here replies to that letter. Any further opinions regarding this matter will be gladly printed by The Daily, in this column or in Campus Opinion. Profes- sor O'Neill's letter follows: "My dear Mr. Pritchard: "In compliance with your request when you Musical Events ORGAN RECITAL Air Majestueuz .................... Rameau Rondo "Soeur Monique"..........Couperin Forlane........................Aubert Fugue in E Flat (St. Ann's) .... ...... Bach Symphonic Chorale on "Ach, bleib mit deiner Gnade".................Karg-Elert Vermeland.....................Hanson Scherzo (Symchony IV)...........Widor The Swan (request) ............. Saint-Saens Rhapsody in D ........... . ..... Saint-Saens A FTER a skip of a week, Palmer Christian will again present his regular organ recital. The St. Anne's Fugue of Bach, and the Karg-Elert Symphonic Chorale are particularly noteworthy on this program. Hanson's "Vermeland" is based on a Swedish folk-song "Vermeland," Thou Beauti- ful." The recital will begin promptly at 4:15. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be con- strued as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disrearded. The names of communicants will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request. Oontributors ;arc a sked to be brief, confining thnmselvt,! to less than 300 words if possible. EDITORS OF "WHAT'S DOING" MUST BE SOCIALLY ILLITERATE To the Editor: That odious, backbiting scandal sheet, "What's Doing," has little excuse for existing. Its malicious attacks are rarely justified, and they are espe- cially obnoxious when they malign inaccurately. One finds in the most recent of campus talk the following imbecilic lines: "Wonderful - What is this Vanguard Club we read about now and then in The Daily? Our dictionary says the word means 'bringing up the rear.'' I do not know what dictionary was referred to; but my dictionary (Funk and Wagnalls Practical Standard Dictionary) defines vanguard as fol- lows: "the advance-guard of an army." It is not my intention to quibble over the defi- nition of a term. What arouses me is the obvious motive behind the thrust. The paragraph is prompted by the typical social illiteracy of a par- ticular person, representative of a large number of students. Although I can understand why the the general student body is apathetic, lethargic, and indifferent to radical activity, I cannot pre- vent myself from disliking the narrow attitudes displayed by smug students. The college institution prolongs infancy. And it is aided tremendously by purveyors of idiotic gossip, such as "What's Doing." i I IF mmmm . _* ... I Colegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD Here's belated solace to those who still mourn the rigors of the deadly finals; at Collegiate In- stitute, Stratford, Ontario, final exams had to be postponed because when the time came for writing the tests it was found that the ink had frozen in all the student's pens. They are talking about the co-ed at Ohio State University who prayed that her profes- sor would give her a passing glance. A former student at Northwestern University, who is chairman of the student curriculum com- mittee of the school of journalism, has started a new course called "Foreign Affairs -Bull Ses- sion A." Only 25 students will be permitted to take the course. According to many people: - The average college mian is too honest to steal, too proud to beg, too lazy to work, and too poor to pay cash. That's why we have to give him credit. When fraternities at the University of Southern California fail to pay dues to the interfraternity council, that organization calmly informs them that they cannot rush any prospective members until the delinquencies have been taken care of. Add this to your list of definitions: Love is but the glowing embers of rotten wood. When it is burned out, the cinders make splendid Charcoal. -'Worcester College Weekly Coe College sophomores indicated in a recent survey that they do not believe a co-ed's appear- ance is enhanced by the use of lipstick and nail polish. I 11