THE MICHIGAN DRILY TI vices alone will not prevent accidents. The rea cause of a great percentage of automobile fatal- ities'is idiotic recklessness and carelessness on thc part of the average driver. Signals and warnings mean little to a driver who fails to look at them. Automobile fatalities can be lessened by sending reckless drivers to prison, by punishing hit-and- run murderers to the limit of the law, by forbiddins the use of the roads to the intoxicated and by increasing the state requirements for a driver's license. But also the members of the Washtenaw County committee must put forward their best efforts to provide an educational program to end the motorist's lust for thrills and speed. It is at this task that the committee can be of most service. 1 _, S' a s S I COLLEGIATE OBSERVER 61N w By BUD BERNARD Just after the first of the month, a student at 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 s be brief, the editor reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words. N.S.L. Rebuttal NOTE: Because of the length of Mr. Fisch's rebuttal, it has been divided, with his consent, into two parts. He will conclude his comments on Captain Pack in tomorrow's Daily. The Editors.; Evidently Philip C. Pack, Captain, Infantry As- sistant G-3, 32nd Division, was so highly amused over the letters concerning Bill Brown which appeared in the Daily on Jan. 26, that he mis- interpreted it entirely. Or perhaps the letter, rath- er than being "remarkably well written," was shamefully ambiguous. Captain Pack saw fit to include in his letter, not only some naive beliefs, pep talk for the R.O.T.C. and some obscuring play on personalities, but also a serious distortion of important parts of my former letter. The personalities raised by Captain Pack are evidently injected to obscure the issue involved, namely, how to fight against war. They are en- tirely beside the point and therefore call for no rebuttal or refutation. Let them lie. Now to the more serious part.of Captain Pack's letter. (1) In the second and third paragraph of his letter, Captain Pack commits a distortion of my former letter which any unbiased judge could not help but consider intentional. In speaking of the tactics of the National Student League's anti-war struggle, Captain Pack, by some mys- terious reasoning known only to himself, comes to the conclusion that the strategy of the N.S.L. consists of "lying down, supinely, belly up in the face of an armed aggression." Where, in my former letter, did the Captain come across any such state- ment? To the contrary, if Captain Pack, will re- read the letter he will find that the keynote of the N.S.L. fight against war is aggressive, open action against militarism and its twin brother, Fascism. Is this "lying down, belly up?" (2) Next, Captain Pack voices a fear of an- nexation by "almost any minor power." Well, if the truth must be told, one couldn't blame, say, Cuba for example, for trying to get a few bites back after all these years of playing the role of bitee. But Captain Pack is needlessly frightened. The picture of Cuba trying to "annex" the United .States is actually very funny. Why it took the United States Marines quite a good number of years to bring even such a small place as Haiti, into the proper state of subjugation! (Continued Tomorrow) Art Cinema's Purpose To the Editor: On March 1 and 2 the Art Cinema League is showing the latest Russian film, "Chapayev." . It is now in its seventh week at the Cameo The- atre in New York City. The purpose of the Art Cinema League is to show the best available from each of the major film countries of the world. We were pioneers in this endeavor but now there are many similar organizations, at International House of the Uni- versity of Chicago, Michigan State, University of Pennsylvania, Columbia, Harvard, and University, of California, as well as in many of the larger cities throughout the nation. Because of our' early start we have been confronted with many difficulties. It has been difficult to obtain films. We have been accused of having the most diverse' of ulterior motives. We have had difficulties with sound equipment and even met with NRA inter- ference temporarily. With a full realization of our many shortcomings, we cannot refrain from point- ing to our record for the past two years, with a feeling that it represents an activity deserving of1 support in a cultural community.1 We have shown: "Le Million," "Zoo in Budapest," "China Express," "Be Mine Tonight," "Poil de Carotte," "Road to Life," "Der Hauptman von1 Kopenic," "No Greater Glory," "I Was a Spy," and "The Good Companions." Two of these were Amer-] ican, three Russian, two French, three British, and one German. The Detroit Cinema Guild is exhibiting a series! of six programs at The Detroit Art Institute at1 a price of $4 for the six or of $1 for a single guest ticket. The features on three of their programs arei "Poil de Carotte," "Le Million," and "China Ex-] press." The sponsors of this Guild are leaders in the support of the many cultural organizations{ in that city. Because they are unable to show "Chapayev" this spring, a number interested in this group are planning to come to Ann Arbor for our showing. We are simply trying to render a cinema serv- ice to Ann Arbor such as will not be undertaken exc'ept by some such group. We believe that there are values other than mere entertainment to be had from the cinema. We are attempting to obtain' and to use the advice of our most interested patrons. On a questionnaire passed out at a screening, "Chapayev" was voted fourth place in a list of 15. "Man of Aran," "Catherine the Great," and "Three Songs About Lenin," preceded it. The first two cannot be shown at this time and the latter was rejected as unsuitable. Cornell University happened to come into a bit of t money, as is the custom at those times. Being a prudent lad and thrifty, he decided to lay in a t supply of choice liquors, etc., against a rainy day. t This was duly done. A week or so afterwards the student came back to his room from a lab and found his room in rather a mess. All his hoarded liquor was open and done away with, and the bottles were lying all over the place. On his desk was the following note: "Dear Bill: I was just passing through and dropped in to see you. Sorry you weren't in, but I'll call around sometime next week. Yours. Jack." On the sofa in the corner, Jack was lying very much asleep. They are talking about the student at Ohio State University in a public speaking class, who when he was required to make a convinc- ing talk to his class and to the instructor too, teok the subject, "Why I Should Be Given an 'A' On This Speech." He talked 20 minutes and got the 'A.' What is his power? A freshman at the University of Maryland submitted a theme on "Why I Didn't Join a Soror- ity." It went: 1. I want to think for myself and not be led around by a bunch of sisters. 2. I never went in for women's organiza- tions at home. 3. I didn't want a lot of fraternity men looking in at me at night. 4. I have never danced with a man in my life and I don't want to start now. 5. Too many men are in the habit of slap- ping me on the back and hitting me in the itomach for the benefit of the sorority sisters. 6. I'M A MALE ANYWAY. The Daily Illini submits this as the proper line to pull when complaints arrive from home about your grades: "The primary purpose of education is man- hood, not scholarship. What do you think?" The Rhode Island Philosophical Society meet- ing at Brown University heard a professor there berate the cosmetic craze. Said he: "Women of today stain their nails in such a ,",ay as to resemble the claws of a tiger rjpping up a sheep. If the reason for staining the nails is to pro- vide decorative spots of bright color in such hues as red, as well as green, or blue or golden, why not have likewise green or blue or golden lips, eyebrows, cheeks or ears? Especially with the addition of colored wigs to match, some wonderful effects would undoubtedly be achieved." The Daily Jilini tries to explain some recent song hits: "Am I to Blame" - Flunked. "Sophisticated Lady" - Co-ed. "Lost in a Fog" ---Finals. "With Every Breath I Take" --- Halitosis. "Blame It On My Youth"-- Slapped. I 11 I I ®I I Just So We May Coll It Our Feb- Issue, The Garg Will Come I I 1I I I A Washington BYSTANDER By KI RKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 WHILE PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S NRA mes- sage informed Congress that on that "pattern" a new order of industrial relations "is definitely taking shape," the question of the permanent sta- tutory form it is to take seems deferred. No bill to crystallize what nearly a year of ex- perience with the complicated code mechanisms has taught is sent to the hill for signature on the dotted line. On the contrary, a two-year exten- sion with modifications of the original recovery act is asked. The implication is that not only has 11 months been too short a time, as the President said, to create a "great code of law, of order, of decent business," but that it will take perhaps another two years - and another presi- dential election - to reach that goal. IT SEEMS a fair assumption that the President has been unable to glean from the study of the probably conflicting views of his NRA lieu- tenants any conclusive and final judgment on de- tails. He has placed all these recommendations and studies at the disposal of Congressional commit- tees; but with the warning that they do not pro- vide "anything like a finished draft" of either a permanent NRA act or even of the proposed two- year ad interim extension. Outside of a broad statement of principles to guide legislation, the whole NRA problem goes back to Congress. That represents a change of Roosevelt method. Probably it represents also the general conception of his message that NRA has passed its emergency status and proved itself suffi- ciently to justify immediate extension, but that the drafting of permanent law can be left to normal and more deliberate legislative processes. It does not call for Congressional rubber stamping of an administration bill. rTHE NRA message quiets finally all the whisper- ing back stage for months that the adminis- tration was just about ready to wash out that phase of its original recovery and reform plans. That construction was widely placed on what hap- pened when General Hugh Johnson stepped out of NRA. Recapitulating the part NRA played in the big show and in the face of cries of "failure" so loudly raised against it, the President now ranks it as the "biggest factor" in stemming the depression tide. There is a direct, if belated, presidential award cS " It Costsca CionsBuilding or Pone 2l214 4 a