PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1935 . I -r.- THE MICHIGAN DAILY J - Publaed every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER 5assodted o0Utgiate *tos -x1934 i 4}1Jf w1935 e- MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited $o it or not otherwise creditedin this paper and the locl 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, 1.5 During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, Offices: Student Publications 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 4925 MANAGING EDITOR...............THOMAS H. KLEENE ' - ASSOCIATE EDITOR............... THOMAS E. GROEHN ASSOCIATE EDITOR................JOHN J. FLAHERTY SPORTS EDITOR....................WILLIAM R. REED WOMEN'S EDITOR..............JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS: Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred W. Neal, Elsie Pierce, Robert Pulver, Marshall D. Shulman, Bernard Weissman. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Rob- ert Cummins, Fred Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Ray- mond Goodman. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence IH. Davies Olive E. Griffiths, Marion T. Holden, Lois M. King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Leonard Bleyer, Jr., Wil- liam A. Boles, Richard Cohen, Arnold S. Daniels, William De Lancey, Robert Eckhouse, John J. 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HERSHEY A Loss To The World.. .. I T APPEARS almost useless to eulo- gize Jane Addams. Her life was so completely an everlasting monument that any- thing further to be said must, of necessity, seem pale and superfluous. Beginning with the study of civics in the grades, Jane Addams was a familiar figure to American students. Her name, inextricably bound with Hull House, has always stood as a symbol of super- human accomplishment in the field of sociology. Second only to her work among Chicago immi- grants, stands the record of her efforts against war. Jane Addams was no mere peacetime paci- fist, but when nations were actually fighting, she clung to her ideal and struggled against world opinion. Nor were war and poverty her only en- emies, racial and religious antipathies, child labor, political corruption, and sex inequality all felt the influence of her unremittent opposition. One fortunate aspect of Jane Addams' work was the recognition that came during her lifetime. She was the recipient of the Nobel peace prize, ten honorary degrees, the M. Carey Thomas prize, and numerous' other awards. It is doubtful, how- ever, if these, or any award could adequately repay her. Probably Jane Addams did not wish to be repaid, and we can only hope that the satisfac- tion she received in surveying her accomplish- ments, equalled, in a measure, her untiring efforts. Theodore Roosevelt once called her "Chicago's most useful citizen." Mankind may remember Jane Addams as the world's most useful citizen during her own period. This Matter Of Liberalism. . AN ISSUE that raised its head at Aith Spring Parley made its appear- ance again Monday night. Liberalism -is the term more than an empty jingle? Preston W. Slosson, first at the Parley and then again in the debate with William Weinstone; com- munist, sees it as the saving grace of a rational social consciousness. Liberalism, he declared, is the right to freedom sor Slosson rather than with those of his com- munist opponent. However, the bugle call of reason appeared not to survive the rational examination. What is the ]iberal man's viewpoint in facing our present diffi- culties, we wondered. Well, liberals have no plan. A liberal man should experiment with different forms of govern- ment and take from each its best qualities. He should be restrained by a general feeling of passive "watchful waiting" while natural forces permit evlution - painless and certain - to bring us into an adjusted economic order. Neither of these attitudes is substantial. They are, as Professor SiAsson's opponent put it, "plan- less plans," and are not justifiable ways of facing our economic dilemma. The laissez faire excuse for inactivity (it was called, at the Parley, "arinchair liberalism") no longer can be accepted after rational examina- tion. The exigencies of the situation are such that they require the active agency of every element in every government. And the idea of experimentation, the scientific attitude, is attractive, but lacks plausibility. The New Deal might be mentioned as just such an ex- periment. Found underlying much of its actions are basic philosophies at extreme variance with one another. "All that is necessary," the liberal might say, "is to observe whether those functions motivated by one philosophy are more successful than those of another and to act accordingly." But it doesn't work. Nowhere, in the New Deal or in any other experimental society, can con- ditions obtain where predictability of reasonable certainty is offered. Adjustment for changing con- ditions and.failure of experiments to operate in the pure agar uninfluenced by factors not taken into account makes for uncertainty. Liberalism as a political doctrine can mean no more than an appeal for a tolerant consideration of other more substantial doctrines. It does not in itself constitute an attitude. This argument does, it is true, leave the problem essentially unchanged from that of the conclusions arrived at in the Parley sessions. Something more tenable than Professor Slosson's belief is called for, and yet we do not feel that rejection of his argu- ment constitutes an acceptance of the point of view of his opponent. The Future Of Airplanes... N RUSSIA the Maxim Gorky, world's largest land plane, crashes with an escorting ship, breaks up, and 49 per- sons are killed. In America there have been two serious passenger plane crashes within the last month. Incidents such as these naturally give rise to the question of whether or not the future of flying is as unlimited as the rapid progress made in the last decade would seem to indi- cate. Optimistic inventors predict a flivver plane inr every garage, and pessimistic commentators on world affairs warn of the great danger of attack from across the seas by great fleets of hostilel planes. At the other extreme, are the die-hards,t who predict that the airplane will never be of any great commercial or military value. As far as they are concerned, man's flying future is very dark. It is probable that both extremes are wrong, and that the airplanes will never be much more pop- ular, or of any more commercial or military value than they are now. One factor that precludes the possibility of every man being his own pilot is the intricacy and danger of flying as compared with the driving of an automobile. The ordinary driver has a few slight accidents over a period of years - in the air there is rarely a second accident. Only skill- ful, well-trained experts can pilot planes now - even then not too safely - and there is little chance of this condition ever changing. It is tempting to point to the rapid development of land transportation and then predict the same evolution for the air, but they are too different to be compared. The airplane will never become a thing for the masses, there will never be one in every garage, nor will there be any great menace of them cross- ing the Atlantic or Pacific oceans to attack the United States or any other country. As it is today used for travelers who are in a hurry, for carry- ing perishable cargoes, and for use as an agent ofv local military power, so will the airplane be used in the future. Perhaps these activities will be on a slightly larger scale, but basically they will remain unchanged. Is ~Others SeeItj Transition (From the Cornell Daily Sun) APPARENTLY many colleges have realized the great problem of transition guidance for en- tering high school pupils for universities through- out the nation have been testing different plans which seek to aid the secondary school graduate to orient himself in college. Most of the schemes operate along the lines of the Cornell DayWeek- end or where the college is located in or within a reasonable distance of a large city the pre-admis- sions program. Hunter College has met with considerable suc- cess in conducting a pre-admissions program which entails two or three visits to the college by students who wish to enter Hunter College and have a better than average chance to be ad- mitted. The visits comprise attendance at a mass meeting, conferences for individuals or for small groups between the prospective freshman and a representative of the department in which she intends to major, and also contact with a Bureau of Educational Guidance. . According to a reiort of the Bureau of Educa- tion Guidance at Hunter, the effect of the pre- admission program has been to decrease the per- COLLEGIlATE OB.SERVER By BUD BERNARD "Dear Bud," writes L.F.M., '38, "hope you can find a place for the rhyme below in your column." FOOLED Oh we were just platonic friends, Or so at first I thought. He called me always "little pal," And all that tommyrot. He dated not another girl, Took me to all the dances, And not a once in all our dates Did he make any advances. Now vacation's drawing near, And as the school ycaar ends I hate to say -but oh I must, We're parting just platonic friends. Hearst Metrotone News took another slap in the face recently when the operator of a theater on the Princeton campus yielded to ,popular demands and stopped showing, according to the Cornell Daily Sun, jingo newsreels. This third coup of the anti-Hearst campaign, the Cornell publication says, which puts the Orange and Black in a fighting class with Williams and Amherst Colleges, leaves the liberal elements rubbing their hands. From behind their strong- holds in Williamstown, Amherst and Princeton, the Cornell Sun says various student leagues are issuing encouragement to the allies. They pro- phesy an early downfall of the enemy, the paper says, and paint the rosy picture of a future minus Hearst newsreels. If results mean anything, the publication concludes, we must certainly agree that they have gotten the propagandist with his tail behind his legs. Heres a little object lesson for administra- tive officials. Not long ago, Morrie Ryskind, together with three other authors of "Of Thee I Sing," re- ceived the Pulitzer prize award from the hands of Nicholas Murray Butler of Columia Univer- sity. This gave him the biggest pleasure, because some years ago, he was forced rather abruptly to sever his connections with the aforemen- tioned university when, as a student editor, he ran a caption thusly: NICHOLAS MURRAY, BUTLER This happened at one of the fraternity houses at the Indiana University, at least the columnist of the Ohio State Lantern vouches for the truthful- ness of the story. The young fellow dashed into the house, peeled off his clothes, sprinted into the shower, rubbed himself vigorously, and dressed with meticulous care. For 15 minutes he perfected his appearance before his mirror. Then he sat down and twirled his thumbs until 8:30 when he rushed into the phone booth and called his girl friend long dis- tance. i A nnouncing--0 istributon of the 1935, MICH IGAN ENSIAN TODAY and TOMORROW at the Student Publications Building from 9:00-"12:00 and / 1:00 -- 5:00 Additional Copies Available at $5.00 Each t+- I 46 11 I Just Before E xams A Washington BYSTANDER I-i _ . _:. _p . By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, May 22. MAGAZINE PUBLICATION of a ground floor diagram of the new White House executive office some time ago put Secret Service teeth on edge. The publishers heard about it from head- quarters and it's a reasonable guess that some got called on the carpet for letting the plan leak. The only "news" in it was the pointing out of means of secret exit of secret presidential visitors. As a matter of fact, there are probably a dozen different ways in which visitors could be ushered in or out of the presidential office without any- one excepttheWhite House staff knowing about it, and there always have been. THE LOCATION of the press room, where re- porters on the White House assignment hold forth, just inside the main door of the office build- ing originally was a concession to the conven- ience of visitors. By and large, the majority of presidential callers in business hours would rather miss seeing the President than the reporters. That executive office lobby is about the best po- litical publicity sounding board in the country. Everyone in Congress knows it. Whenever a sen- ator or representative has an idea, legislative of not, that looms to him as having personal political value about it, he is almost certain to make a date at the White House. Maybe he talks only weather with the President; but he talks publicity turkey with the reporters when he comes out. It is only when the idea gets about in Congress that a President's popularity is waning in the coun- try that his congressional calling list falls off. The White House reporters began reading portents of what was to happen in 1932 many months before election, by that sign. THERE SEEMS to be some mystery about just who laid out the plans of the new White House offices anyhow. It was a hurry-up job. There are so many passages and corridors and doors all about that even the messengers had difficulty learning their way about. Architectural fancy seems to have dictated some arrangements. There is one secretarial ante-room, for instance, with two big doors, within a yard or so of each other, both opening into the same room. The idea may have been to afford the staff oppor- Are In Demand In the next few weeks, hundreds of students will he completing hundreds of theses in that charac- teristic last-minute rush. Why not extend a help- ing hand to your fellow student and at the same time increase your earnings as a typist. Through the medium of The Michigan Daily Classified Columin you will find ready business. Special weekly rates for "Typing Wanted" ads and dis- count for cash payments. Stop at 420 Maynard Street today or call 2-1214 for further particulars. Student Publications flu lding rri 111Ud7L~~~itk hfhLE t I