C1HMAN JDAUL Yi I The SOAP BOX Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief. the editbr reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words. ;J-1 Time For Cooperation Pubibed every morning except Monday during the trniversity year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association %nd the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER Associated GKolegitate t-ss -i934 (I o 1at igft 1935e' snscoSTN 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 dis- patches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00: by mail, $4.50. Offices: Student Pu4Jications Building, Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 11. West 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. -400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4923 MANAGING EDITOR.............WILLIAM G. FERRIS CITY EDITOR ...........................JOHN HEALEY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR ...........RALPH G. COULTER SPIRTS EDITOR.................ARTHU GCARSTENS WOMEN'S EDITOR ......................EIuTANOR BLUM NIGHT EDITORS: Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaherty, Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas H. Kleene, David G. Mac- donald, John M. O'Connell, Ar.hur M. Taub. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Kenneth Parker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara L. Bates, Dorothy Gies, Florence Harper, zleanor Johnson, Josephine McLean, Margaret D. Phalan, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Murphy. aEPORTERS: Rex Lee Beach, Robert B. Brown, Cliniton B. Conger, Shldon M. Ellis, William H. Fleming, Richard G. Hersheyr Ralph W. Hurd, Bernard Levick, Fred W. Neal, Robert Pulver, Lloyd S. Reich, Jacob C. Seidel, Marshall D. Shulman, Donald Smith, Wayne H. Stewart, Bernard Weissman, George Andros, Fred Buesser, Rob- ert Cummins, Fred DeLano, Robert J. Friedman, Ray- mond Goodman, Keith H. Tustison, Joseph Yager. Dorothy Briscoe, Florence Davies, Helen Diefendorf, Elaine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith. Har- r let Hathaway Marion Hoden, Lois King, Selma.Levin, lizabeth Miller, Melba Merrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Rueger. Dorothy Shappell, Molly Solomon, Laura Wino- grad. Jewel Wuerfel. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ...............RUSSELL B. READ CREDIT MANAGER ..................ROBERT S. WARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JANE BASSETT DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, John Og- den; Service Department. Bernard Rosenthal; Contracts, Joseph Rothbard; Accounts, Cameron Hall; Circulation. and National Advertising, David Winkworth; Classified Advertising and Publications, George Atherton- BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: William Jackson, William Barndt, Ted Wohlgemuith, Lyman Bittman, John Park, F. Allen Upson, Willis Tomlinson, Homer Lathrop, Tom1 Clarke, Gordon Cohn, Merrell Jordan, Stanley Joffe, Richard E. Chaddock. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betty Cavender, Margaret Cowie, Bernadine Field, Betty Greve, Mary Lou Hooker, Helen Shapland, Betty Simonds, Marjorie Langenderfer, Grace Snyder, Betty Woodworth, Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Anne Cox, Jane Evans, Ruth Field, Jean Guion, Mildred Haas, Ruth Lipkint, Mary MCord, Jane Wil- loughby. NIGHT EDITOR: COURTNEY A. EVANS SI Convocationt Against War.t To the Editor:j So the N.S.L., that great champion of democratic control, has had a sudden change of heart. Since it can't control the Anti-War Committee, it branches off on its own. Only a week ago it issued t circular which said "The N.S.L. s'upports the April 4 committee. We call upon the entire campus to stand behind the activities of this committee, to join in this united front." The "strike" is not an appropriate gesture and can only hurt the anti-war movement. In the growth of our modern industrial system, the once- prevailing laissez-faire philosophy gave the em- ployer all the advantage in labor relations, and the workingman had to resort to the strike not as an ideal means, but as-the only one available to secure alleviation of unfair conditions. It was always a coercive measure directed against the employer. The call for a student strike can only be con- sidered by the general public as a similar gesture of coercion or defiance against the University ad- ministration, and its true purpose will therefore be lost sight of. The University is not the United States government, nor is it urging a militaristic policy. The success of the movement for permanent peace depends not on hysterical demonstrations by isolated groups but on enlisting the sympathies of a good-sized majority of the American people in favor of international cooperation and suppres- sion of profits in munitions. We can only alienate such support if the general public is given reason to think that the Communist Party, through its adjunct the National Student League, is running the anti-militarism campaign, because for every person in the country sympathetic to the Com- munist Party and the N.S.L. there are a hundred against them but for world peace. If the N.S.L. were sincerely interested in the peace movement rather than in advancing its own prestige it would act not on its own but as a co- operating organization. --Peace Advocate. COLLEGIATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD CAMPUS SNAPSHOTS The Exam (The scene is in any room in which they can give an exam.) "Hay ya, boy !" "Hi! Gosh, I'm going to bust this thing cold. I went down to the movies last week and now I'm paying for it. If I had only stayed home and studied !" "Well grind, that's too bad. Me. I'm not the least bit worried. I'm no genius and I know it. So why study?" "Didn't you study at all?" "Oh, I did about an hour's work last night as I dressed before going out with Helen." "Have a nice time?" "Yeah. It was great. This was one swell week- end. Didn't get in until four Saturday morning. Same Sunday morning, and last night I got in at two so that I could get up today for this exam. Of course, I have a little headache and my feet hurt a bit, but what fun!" CA week later.] "Say grind, what did you get. I flunked." "Gee, I guess they must have been easy on me. I got an 'A'." "Yeah, huh!*" Curious situations may arise when tacit engagements or campus affairs break up. This is the case of a couple at the University of Illinois. When the split came, the co-ed was so angry that she demanded her lock of hair back. "Which one," retorted the peeved male, "the dark lock, or the one that you gave me when you were a blonde?" Since September Northwestern University has lost an average o~f $10 a month on the two public telephones in the library. Slugs, purchased two fcr a penny, and one cent pieces pounded out to the size of a nickel have rung the bell in those phones at the rate of seven a day, until the authorities became righteously provoked. As a result, the telephones are now only slug operative, and each caller must purchase with a U.S. government coin a nickel slug from the tele- phone operator in the building. *: * * * I MAY F i NOTICE 44SIVA I THE PRICES of Season Tickets (six concerts) have been reduced $1.00 each, to new low levels of $2.00, $3.00, and $4.00 for holders of "Festival" Coupons (an average of from 33c to 67c per concert), and $5.00, $6.00, and $7.00 for others. Orders filed and filled in sequence. I ARTISTS MARY MOORE . . . . . HELEN JEPSON . MYRTLE LEONARD RUTH POSSELT. WILBUR EVANS MAXIM PANTELEIFF .... Soprano S. .. Soprano . Contralto Violinist *. Baritone ... Baritone I GIOVANNI MARTINELLi . . . Tenor JOSEF LHEVINNE . . . . . . . . Pianist GROUPS THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION EARL )V. MOORE Musical Director THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FREDERICK STOCK ERIC DELAMARTAL Conductors YOUNG PEOPLE'S FESTIVAL CHORUS JUVA HIGBEE, Conductor PAUL ALTHOUSE. Tenor ETHYL HAYDEN .. . . . . . Soprano* THEODORE WEBB . . . . .. Baritone PAUL LEYSSAC . . . . . MABEL ROSS RHEAD ... Narrator ..Pianist E. WILLIAM DOTY . . . . . . Organist i MY rwiYwn L rin m i. .... 1. WORKS Satisfaction Not Guaranteed To the Editor: It seems very uofortunate that The Daily had to make that apology to Mr. Bert Askwith and his Campus Travel Bureau after having revealed cer- tain student opinion about the whole affair. It leads us to believe that the true facts have not been presented by Mr. Askwith to the representa- tives of The Daily. We sincerely believe that this Bureau is doing an injustice to Michigan students. As former patronizers of the Bureau we have seen the facts ourselves and are not trying to lie before the public. We challenge Mr. Askwith to show us that his excursions have been carried out satisfactorily. --Michael J. Stula, '36. -Elbert H. Hadley, '36. NOTE: The Daily has not attempted to make any guarantee as to the satisfactoriness of the service furnished by Mr. Askwith, a matter which is subject to various interpretations. There were n the original complaint, however, some very dam- aging factual charges - chiefly with regard to Mr. Askwith's responsibility -which The Daily has satisfied itself were entirely false. - The Editors. As Others See It Strike Attitude A freshman at Indiana University had a date with a co-ed who had the reputation of being a gold digger. The boys at the fraternity, house good-naturedly didn't tell the poor frosh about the many pitfalls his little date held for him. They made bets as to how much the evening's entertainment would cost the unfor- tunate yearling. The evening finally came and the freshman called for his date. Away they went for a little ride. After they had traveled a short while the little lady decided that it was about time she started her gold digging tactics. They came near a stand that sold popcorn and the co-ed exclaimed, "My, but that popcorn smells good." Doesn't it," the frosh replied, "I'll drive a little closer." BORIS GODUNOF in English Moussorgsky KINc DAVID..................Honegger eD&UM TAPS" (World Premiere) . . .Hanson (to be conducted by the composer) JUMBLIES (World Premiere)... (conducted by Juva Higbee) James , _. I I NONE OF US wants war. The over- whelming majority of us hate it. Most of us feel the more ,bitterly on the subject because we know that 'ar settles nothing, but only guarantees more war. Many' of us think our coun- try has no reason to be engaged in another war - certainly not on a foreign battlefield. But war will come again just as surely as it has come before -unless the peoples of the world put forth such efforts as they have never done before to prevent war, unless war is opposed by every means that intelligent thinking and deep concern can devise. Today's convocation in Hill Auditorium presents to Michigan students one opportunity to do some- thing about war. It is a chance to register mass sentiment. It is a time to devote intelligent con- sideration some of the complex factors that gen- erate war. If Michigan students are alert to the awfulness of war, it will be necessary to turn them away from, Hill Auditorium today for lack of room. At the same time, if they realize the proportions of the forces that make for war, they must know that today can be only the beginning of, or one event in, a fight that must go on every day of the year as fiercely as on anniversaries. A Washington BYSTANDER Faculty Men Rewarded... FIVE MEMBERS of the faculty were recently honored when they were singled out for Guggenheim Fellowships for 1935. This is not only a recognition of the individual educators, but also the University as a whole. No other educational institution was represented more than three times on a list which included only 47 Fellows in all. The Fellowship winners were selected after keen competition in which 'the several hundred candidates described research projects, covering a range of subjects as broad as all scholarship and- all the arts, which they are desirous of carrying out. The specialties of the Michigan men honored tes- tify as to the variety of the projects to be spon- sored. Founded in 1925 by former United States Senator and Mrs. Simon Guggenheim as a memorial to a son, the purpose of the endowment is "to add to the educational, literary, artistic and scientific power of this country, and also to provide for the cause of better international understanding . . ." The completed projects of the five Michigan men - writer, chemist, archaeologist, philosophy teach- er and mathematician -should .be significant and also add considerable to the present store of (From The Wisconsin Daily Cardinal) FOLLOWING the decision of President Frank not to call an all-University convocation on April 12, the plans have veered back to the strike orig- inally planned for that day. Since we favored the convocation, especially for its educational value, it has been taken for granted that we would similarly approve of the strike. While we sympathize with the aims and principles for which this student expression was called, we stand aloof from this demonstration. We have consistently favored a peace movement among the nation's youth. We feel that only through the cooperation Land the combination of all forces sincerely working for peace can any tangible results be shown on the record. In the international field, our desire has always been that of harmony and understanding: our editorial comment has wholeheartedly favored entrance into the World Court and into the League of Nations. When the convocation was first proposed to re- place the strike, we were heartily in accord. We believed an unbiased objective, well-rounded ex- position of the problems of war would benefit the exjtire student body. We agree with President Frank that the viewpoint of no one group could be presented at a convocation which presumably presents the official university attitude. The National Student League is the present cause of our doubt over the planned strike. It is our unbiased conviction that if the Na- tional Student League prints in its own program that it opposed the pacifist position, in substance, it can have no other motive than that of merely causing ferment to be used for its own militant efforts in other directions. Only when work is done for its own ends, with- out being entangled in subtle and selfish designs, will this publication give it support. This is as pertinent for the most conservative of our stu- dent organizations as well as for the present ob- ject of our censure. New York University students have a new crib- bing method. They write notes on spectacles in grapefruit juice which becomes visible when the By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, April 3. 4GLANCE AT THE Flynn plan for de-profitiz- ing war, approved in principle by the Senate war profits investigation committee, identifies it as having a far deeper purpose. It is aimed at war itself, via the nation's pocketbook. That has been young Senator Nye's obvious purpose all along. And, thereby can be discerned the basis of an agreement between the White House and the sen- ator to share the field. The White House is no less committed to the notion of striking down war profits than young Nye and his committee col- leagues; yet it probably expects to approach the problem legislatively on a much narrower front. What the President must have asked Bernard Baruch and his war-profits commission to do was prepare a practical plan for limiting war profits, rather than a measure designed to "strike at the economic heart of the war problem," as Senator Vandenberg of the committee put it. If that guess proves correct, the administration bill when pre- sented should be a much easier .measure to get enacted than the Flynn-Nye project. rJ)HE FLYNN plan hardly could have bobbed up at a time when incidental events were more likely to give it a send-off. The critical situation in Europe, coupled with memories aroused by the 18th anniversary of American entry into the World War, bore on public reception of the idea. Would America ever have been in that struggle had the profit motive been as totally lacking as the Flynn plan contemplates? Or to go back further, would America have been in any danger of being drawn into the war had it not been for war orders from abroad between 1914 and 1917? How does the Flynn plan contemplate dealing with munitions profits on somebody else's war? The Flynn idea raises such questions. It even z aises a doubt as to what might have been the outcome of the World War, America not participat- ing either as a belligerent or as a source of war supplies for any of the belligerents. THE ROUSING vote by which the bonus payment bill in the Patman form most objectionable to the White House when through the House is another matter in point. That two-billion-dollar affair is a sort of deferred war debt. It was orig- .nally sponsored on the contention that stay-at- rimRrA marnn.i nincvpr nna infa+inn of a in c 11 I 11 1 I