THIE MIlCHIGAN DAILY
FRIDAY; MARCW& 193C
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NIGHiT EDITOR: CLINTON B. CONGER
Tb Lahor. . .
TN AT LEAST one point we are in
full sympathy with New York's
building service strikers. We feel they should have
been granted the opportunity of mediation weeks
ago when they first demanded it.
The Realty Advisory Board of New York, against
'whose dictums the strike is called, should have
adopted the policy of the dress-makaing industry of
!New York. The dress wor'kers made their de-
mands and threatened to strike unless they were
met, and their employers responded --after re-
peated threats, it must be said -with a satisfac-
tory agreement. A strike that would have wrought
considerable harm to the dress industry was
avoided-.
But New York's Realty Advisory Board thought
they could bulldoze the strikers; and as a result
America's largest city is very uncomfortable today.
fly their repeated demands for conciliation before
their strike was called, and now by their willing-
ness to accept Edward F. McGrady of the Federal
governmient as conciliation negotiator, the strik-
ers have made their stand clear. The Board made
their stand clear, too. They refused private arbi-
tration, and New York State arbitra'tion, but later
accepted Federal arbitration. They further clar-
ified their stand by announcing that they would
hire the nation's most notorious and brutal strike
breaking organization.
It is true that labor unions are often unfair'
in their demands, but they deserve nevertheless the
right of arbitration. If employers can find no way
to meet their demands, come what may, but give
labor a hearing.
Clouds
In 1 1e East.---
THREATS of oil embargoes, and Brit-
Tain's great rearmament program
add to the tension in Europe, and make even
greater the threat of war on the continent, but the
situation there is safe and harmless compared to
that in the East.
The situation in the East is so complex, and so
Critical at the present moment, that it is worthy
of review, for it now appears quite definite that war
will break forth there, and then spread to embrace
parts of the continent or more.
First, Stalin himself, in an interview with Roy
W.-'Howard, acknowledged the danger in the situa-
tion on the Mongolian border, where Japan has
long been massing troops. Stalin stated in the in-
terview that the injection of Soviet propaganda
into Mongolia will not only serve to awaken that
state to the Japanese menace, but will also serve
to "puff up certain elements in China, especially
those enigaged in anti-Japanese activities." Russia
fears a Japanese invasion of outer Mongolia be-
cause that would put the Japanese air forces in a
position to menace the trans-Siberian line at a
vulnerable point. Fer much the same reason,
Russia fears a Japanese invasion of North China.
Taking the opposite stand is Japan, desperately
in need of new territory, and controlled by a large
militarist faction, which apparently lost but little
strength in the recent attempt to gain power.
Japan must keep expanding, and Russia must keep
her at bay. A clash is inevitable, and, to make
mattrs more complex, China is divided int a
have large interests in the Far East, and it becomes
clear that the situation is moving towards a crisis
which will have international reverberations, and
may very possibly be the cause of another and
greater world war.
Scalping
S calpers * *
TICKET SCALPING is an unlawful
Tpractice that is lucrative with a
minimum of effort and virtually no risk of appre-
hension. The large number of activities on the
campus employing advance sale tickets makes this
mild crime especially rampant in Ann Arbor. Two
cases involving J-Hop scalping were brought be-
fore the University Committee on Student Con-
duct this week and if the boasts of mercurially-
minded students are to be believed, there should
have been many more scalpers hailed before the
Committee.
In 1934 the Student Council prescribed three al-
ternative punishments for scalpel's: suspension
for the semester with re-admission by special per-
mission only, temporary suspension, and proba-
tion. This move has had some effect, for it holds
up a threat to the scalper even though he is prac-
tically invulnerable. It is obvious that to pre-
vent scalping an appeal to the ethical sense of the
student must be made. With apprehension a
negligible factor, the offense should be regarded as
wanton inconsideration of the rights of others.
Unfortunately the satisfaction to be had from a
profit making ticket sale is highly pleasing to many
individuals, as proven by the numerous tales of
high finance following every large dance. We
can only hope that for those with an inordinate
love of money and a practical frame of mind in
addition, the threat of punishment will pre-
vent them from scalping.
As O ersSeGe II
Obsolpee
(From the Daily Pennsylvanian)
"ALECTURE is the process by which the notes
of the professor become the notes of the stu-
dent, without affecting the minds of either," quotes
Professor Rathbun of Stanford University.
Fortunately, all lectures at Pennsylvania are not
subject to this scathing, but unfortunately the ma-
jority of lectures could be successfully eliminated.
Assimilation and not just exposure is the important
factor in modern education. It is not uncommon
to see twenty-five per cent of our lecture class
reading newspapers, playing bridge, tit-tac-toe,
and doing the next hour's assignment while other
members of the class feverishly jot down the gems
of wisdom spouting at machine gun tempo from
the lecturer's mouth. Quiz groups which are in
reality merely small lectures are made up of
twenty-five to thirty undergraduates who care
little about the course and must be content to ob-
tain their knowledge from text books and discuss
their academic problems in bull sessions'..
Harvard, Yale, and Princeton have substi-
tuted discussion groups and tutorial systems with
positive success. While not advocating the com~-
plete abolishment of the lecture system, we do
suggest a modification.
Oliver Twists Of The New Deal
(From the Cleveland Plain Dealer)
Q NCLE SAM is getting tired of boarding his poor
''relations, the innumerable government bu-
reaus and agencies created for special purposes
wehich have either outlived their usefulness or over-
lap permanent establishments. They will be asked
to depart politely, but the form the request will
take seems to be worrying the government.
Senator Byrd of Virginia. who has frequently
criticized New Deal spending, now has a chance
to show what he can do. He has been named chair-
man of a special Senate committee to study means
of cutting costs through the abolition of obsolete
agencies. He has $20,000 with which to conduct
the inquiry. Before he has finished, bureau heads
will learn there are two explorers in the Byrd famn-
ily, and that the discoveries of the Senator mean I
more to the jobholders than those of the Admiral.
Directors of what have been called the "knick-
knack agencies" are frankly upset. They are
haunted by the return of a real Peter Grimm with
a voluminous report to President Roosevelt, setting
forth the waste attached to the continued opera-
tion of these agencies. He was told to survey the
possibility of savingr one billion dollars. Bureau
directors found he was no ghost.
Just how the Oliver Twists of the New Deal
will be asked to remove their shadows from the
government hearth is the perplexing matter. Many
of them are entitled to more funds under legisla-
tion already passed. But the kettle is nearly
empty. Secretary Morgenthan must borrow 17
billion dollars in the next 16 months for refunding
and to meet expenses. No matter how sad the
parting, these stepchildren must go.
Priofessors Not Imprctical
(From the Daily Iowan)
MORE AND MORE, experience is teaching Amer-
icans that college professors are far fromn being
impractical persons, as has been their customary
description in the past.
Jay Franklin cites the skill, humor and intelli-
gence with which Rex Tugwell handled a recent
personal political problem with Nicholas Murray
Butler, president of Columbia university. He also
names Woodrow Wilson and Ray Moley as other
college professors who succeeded in out-maneuver-
ing crafty politicians.
It is dangerous, says Franklin, to regard pro-
fessors as ' dreamy, impractical, innocent creatures
who can be twisted like a pretzel by any hard-
'THE VERY MODEL OF A MODERN COLLEGE
PRESIDENT
(With the customary genuflection to the shade of
Sir W. S. Gilbert)
I am the very pattern of a modern college pres-
ident.
I'm always on the job, though nearly always a
non-resident,
I tour about the country to assemblies gastro- -
nomical
And make all sorts of speeches from sublime to
broadly comical,
I keep the trustees calm and the alumni all
benevolent,
Restrain all signs of riot and publicity malevolent,
I know the market-value of each wage-slave pro-
fessorial,
And how much less he'll take for honorarium
tutorial,
I'm on to all the low intrigues and rivalries
divisional,
And on the budget how I wield my fountain-pen I
excisional!
So though I pile up mileage being generally non-
resident
I am the very model of a modern college president!
I mix with all the business kings -~ the Lions and
the Rotary,
Of heiresses and oil-tycoons I am a hopeful votary,
I'm fond of giving dinners in a lay-out that is
squiffy-cal
And talking on the radio in accents quite pun-
tica,
I use the phrase "distinguished guest"' at every
opportunity,
I welcome all alumni to my parlor every June at
tea,
And though I like to see the neutrals' lonely hearts-
that-burn at ease,
[ always have a kindly word to say about fra-
tern ities',
I've shaken every human hand that's manicured
and squeeZable,
I pass the hat among the rich, the buck wherever
feasible!
So though I pile up mileage being generally nOnl-
resident,
I am the very model of a modern college president!
-H..L
"Work," says our favorite diarist, Mrs. Eleanor
Roosevelt, "when you have no interruptions, when
you can look out at the landscape and in at the
open fire, does not seem like work." Well, we
know different. We have looked out at the land-
scape and in at the open fire for hours at a time,
and the first thing we knew five hours had elapsed
and nothing seeming like work had been done at
all. In order to do work we set our eyes at the
pulled-down curtain and turn our back to the
open fire. Even then, dear diarist, the work is
nothing more immortal than the stuff we do in
the office.
Walking from an eleventh floor office to a fourth
floor composing room, and vice versa and da capo,
doesn't seem like work, either.
From the days of ancient Rome kings and em-
perors have used the royal "we" as if they were
beings set apart fr'om the common run of hu-
manity. - Wireless to the New York Times.
What says Kipling?
All the people like us are We,
And everyone else is They.
Conservation Commissioner Lithgow Osborne
has decided that there will be no open season on
beaver in this state. He cited a decrease of 1,436
beaver in the 1931 season. These figures should
be made much of by the A. F. of L., there being
1,436 fewer beaivers at work.
FATHER TALKS LIKE GOD
F'ATHER was a stuc~ier for wnat he called '"talk-
ing United States." I can remember bringing
"show-fur" home from school, and offering it to
Father. He boomed, "What!" I ventured "show-
fur" again. "Talk as if you were a civilized being!-
Talk United States!"
I had a very hard time of it, between Father's
conviction about the United States language and
his determination that his son should be at the
top of the class.
Mother, usually, was docile. She told me that
"Teacher knew best." Mother didn't care much
about words anyhow, but Father was different. He
felt that they should be used correctly and that
he knew the right way to say them.
The worst and most lasting word battle our f am-
ily ever waged against the neighbors was on Lin-
coln. Father put the "1" in it. Mother never knew
whether to put it in or to leave it out. She solved
the whole question by never speaking of him ex-
cept as "Honest Abe." Father refused to com-
promise. He talked often and long about "Lin-
col-n." Whoever Father was talking to would look
pretty baffled for the first few minutes, then he
would come in with a "Lin-con." Usually, Father
wouldn't correct him, but would tell us afterward
that "it was just that kind of carelessness that
made our civilization as backward as it was."
I remember one occasion when a new minister
was talking to Father. The minister said "Lin-'
con" in an insistent tone. Father came back with
"Lin-col-n" in a strong deep roar. They went
on until it was apparent that neither would give
in. Father could out-boom the minister, and
Father knew he had right on his side. The min-
ister decided he'd outsmart Father. He suggested
that we all kneel in prayer. We got down by our
chairs. During the prayer he brought "Lin-con" to
God's notice. At "Amen" he started to get up, but
he didn't know Father.
"'God, I want to speak to you about Lin-
col-n.' - -
The minister gave up. He went home. He
never knew that that was the first time Father's
A WashingtnO
By KIRKE SIMPSON
XASHINGTON, March 5. - It re-
'mained for Representative Tom
Blanton, Texas Democrat, to crack
open congressionally the row over the
H agoodsto dithat m ilitary coventry,
home on an "await orders" status.
Yet if Blanton read the papers next
day he might have been surprised to
find that while Republicans in House
and Senate and the American Liberty
League leaped gleefully into the Ha-
good melee, they totally ignored
Blanton's explanation of what it was
all about.
For it was Blanton's contention that
Hagood was disciplined not because
of his wisecrack remarks to a house
military sub-committee about PWA-
WPA "stage money," but because of
a long standing feud between Blanton
and Harry Woodring, assistant secre-
tary of war.
YET nobody paid news attention to
-the Blanton-Woodring angle. In-
stead, the routine phrase from the
army order ",by direction of the Presi-
dent" took the headlines. Certainly,
if Hagood's summary removal from
his corps area command was not done
by specific presidential direction to
discipline the officer for too free com-
ments on New Deal methods, there
was no political capital to be made
out of the incident.
Tchniclly of course, all army or
navy orders are issued by direction of
the President. He is by Constitution
commander-in-chiet of both services.
Congress has learned that to its sor-
row now and then when it attempted
to appoint or promote an officer by
indirect methods. All Presidents
habitually ignore such legislation.
They have never permitted any legis-
lative trespass on their constitutional
function.
RESIDENT kOOSEVELT had
nearly eight years navy depart-
ment training on his introduction in-
to national public life. That would
tend to make him view perhaps less
[leniently verbal indiscretions of high
ranking armyo adnav officer a
FRIDAY, MARCh 6, 1936
VOL XLVI No. 107
Notices
To The Members of the University
Ccuncil: The regular March meeting
of the University Council has been
cancelled.
ProcEdure in Case of Articles Stol-
cn or Missing: Notice should be given
at the Business office, Room 3, Uni-
versity Hall, with the utmost prompt-
ness whenever any articles, whether
owned privately or by the institution,
disappear under circumstances which
indicate theft.
Marsh and Mandlebaum Scholar-
ships in the C'ollege of Literature,
Science, and the Arts: Applications
for these scholarships for the year
1936-37 may now be made on blanks
to be obtained at the office of the
Dean of the College, 1210 Angell Hall.
All blanks must be retui'ned to the
same office on or before March 20.
These scholarships may be held by
those who are enrolled in the College
of Literature, Science, and the Arts
only. The Marsh Scholarships are
available to both men and women,
the Mandlebaum Scholarships may
be awarded to men only. For further
information consult the bulletin on
Scholarships and Fellowships which
may be obtained at the office oU the
Secretary in University hall.
5(41oj 1)1 Edl'adioii 'ltaum or
Elections: No c'ourse may be electe d
for credit atter Satui'day. March 7.
Students enrolled in this school ust
report all changes of elections at the
Registrar's Office,. Room 4, Universi-
ty Hall. This includes any change
of sections or instructors.
Membership in a class does not
cease nor begin until all changes have
thus officially registered. Arrange-
ments made with the instru('t (i' are
not official changes.
enc ad The CArts: No coes ma
be elected for credit after the end of
the third week. Saturday, March 7,
is therefore the last date on which
new elections may be approved. The
willingness of an individual instruc-
tor to admit a student later would not
affect the operation of this rule.
Conert
Faculty Concert: Wassily Besekir-
sky, violinist, andi Joseph Brinkman,
pianist, of the faculty of the Universi-
ty School of Music, will provide a
program of Sonatas Sunday after-
noon, Mai'ch 8, at 4:15 o'clock, in
Hill Auditorium, to which the general
public, with the exception of small
children, is invited without admission
ever, to bee seated on time as th
doors xvill be closed during numbers.
The program is as follows:
Sonata in B-flat (Kochel No. 378)
.. .............M ozart
An1dantino sostenuto
Rondo
Sonata in Q major, Op. 78 . .Brahms
Vivace ma non troppo
Adagio
Allegro molto moderato
El Poema de Una Sanluquena ...
. urina
Ante el espejo
La cancion del lunar
El rosario en Ia iglesia
Ahicinaciones
A1 dei i Nt i.e
Geology II Final Examination: The'
make-up examination will be given
Friday at 2:00 in Room 3055 N.S.
Make-up Examination in Chem-
istry 3, Lecture Section II (Prof.
Bates) will be held at 3 p.m. on
Thursday, March 12, Room 410
Chemnistry Building.
Political. Science 1: Make-up ex-
amination Saturday, March 7, 2 p..
Room 2029 A.H.
Leetti res
Public Lecture: "University of
Michigan Excavations in Egypt" by
Mr. Enoch E. Peterson, Director of
U. of M. Excavations in Egypt. Spon-
sored by the Research Seminary in
Islamic Art. Monday March 9, 4:15,
in Roomn D, Alumni Memorial Hall.
Admission free.
Dr. Paul Tillich, formerly Profes-
sor of Philosophy of Religion at the
University of Frankfort-am-Main,
will speak on "Christianity and the
World Situation" in the Michigan
League, Friday, March 6, 4:15 p.m.
This meeting is sponsored by the
Student Christian Association and is
open to all students.
,vnsO oa
Tryouts for French Play: From 3
to 5 o'clock, Room 408, Romance Lan-
guages Building. Open to all students
interested.
J.G.P. Cast: Raggedy Ann Chorus
meets at Palmer Field House 4 to 5
pm. today. The prologue meets at
the same place from 5 to 6 p.m.
Betty Anne Beebe.
IDcita Epsilon Pi: Important meet-
ing at the Michigan Union at 8 p.m.
sharp. It is urgent thai all members
Pr't byter'iaii Student Party. A
party will be held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Kunkel, 1417 South
University avenue, at 8:30 p.m. The
evening will be spent in playing
games, closing with a fireside sing.
The gi'oup will be asked to offer sug-
gest ions for parties during the spring..
Anly students who wish to attend are
invited.
Coinin Event
Michigan Outdoor Club will hold
a Splash party at the Intramural
Pool Saturday, March 7, from 7:30
to 9:30 p.m. Games and novelty
events will serve as entertainment. A
small entrance fee of 15c will be
charged. Everybody is welcome.
Graduate Outing Club will have a
social evening at Lane Hall, Satur-
dlay, March 7, 8:00 p.m., featuring a
Candy-Pull and Square Dances. Re-
freshments will be served at a small
fe o 15 cents nAll dgraduate students
DAIY FFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bullietin 5, on';trn'Iix'e notice t.o all members of the
Vniversity. Copy received at the oltice or the Assistant to the President
utu 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.
q
viously to crack down on
who talked too much.
New Dealers
S ART 0:.]
AN
EXHIBITION
OF LITHO-
INTS A N D
GRAPhS,
DRYPO
ETCHINGS IN ALUMNI MEM-
ORIAL JIALL '
The Ann Arbor Art Association has
put on display in the South Gallery
'of Alumni Memorial Hall a group of
lithographs, etchings and dry-points
by prominent American artists. The
exhibit contains a large variety of
subjects and an even greater variety
of styles and methods.
The difference in style and treat-
ment is well illustrated by the differ-
ent groups of work on New York,
which is the most popular locale pic-
tured in the collection. One clique,
including Reginald Marsh, Peggy Ba-
con and Ernest Fiene, prefers to pre-
sent the harsh side of New York life.,
while another, with Emil Ganso and
Louis Lozowich outstanding, pictures
the beauty of the city and its people.
Marsh is represented by "Smoke-
hounds," an etching of a scene in the
Bowery. For a better understanding
of the scene, it might be well to ex-
plain that a "smokehound" is a hobo
who drinks an extremely str10ogand
disle ins ivacan lotsyand empty
basements which often has a fatal ef-
fect. In Marsh's etching, the hobos
are pictured standing before a Bow-
ry mnission, with the elevated over-
head. The lines of the etching are
harsh and rough and the effect is a
sharp cruel one.
Mimes:
election of
afternoon,
attend or
Important meeting and
officers 4:30 p.m. Monday
Michigan Union. Please
call Robert Slack.)
Lutheran Student Club: Dr. Mary
E. Markley, Secretary of the Board
of Education of the United Lutheran
Church in America, will be the
speaker at the meeting on Sunday
evening, March 8. An opportunity
will be given students to meet Miss
Markley informally. The talk will
follow supper at 6.
St. Paul's Luther~an Church. Carl A.
IBrauer, Minister.
March 8: 9:30 a.m., Church School.
9:30 a.m., Anniversary service in
I erman. 10:45 a.m., Seventh anni-
vem sary of the new church will be
observed. Sermon by the pastor on
'We Would See Jesus." 6 p.m., Stu-
dent-Walther League supper. 6:30-
7:'30 p.m., An illustrated lecture on
"The Educational Institutions of our
Church." 7:30 p.m. Special anniver-
sary service with sermon by a guest
speaker, the Rev. 0. M. Riedel, Pas-
tor' of Trinity Church, Jackson.
March 11: 7:30 p.m. Third midweek
Lenten service. Sermon, "Jesus-Ac-
cused."
~1
- - -9
e e e.9
In the same class is Peggy Ba- I
con's "'Pity The Blind," a dry-point 1
of a subway scene. Again the lines
are harsh and rough, the charac- AT THE MICHlGAN
ters cold and impersonal. Fiene, the "ESCAPE ME NEVER"
third of the realists, has included in
the exhibit a lithograph entitled AB n .pcue trisEi-
"Linoln onumnt, nionSquae."abeth Bergner, featuring Hugh Sinclair,
The scene pictures Union Square in iree Vabrgh enelp l1ndmey
wvinter, with the statue of Lincoln waru, an nn Hadn.Drcdb
snow-covei'ed, and a young negro .
seated despondently on the steps at ,Seldom does the screen bring us
its base. An impression of despair is j uch a finished actress as Elizabeth
given to the scene of a black back-'Bergner. And seldom is there a ye-
ground, with street light glimmering hidle as fitting for an actress as is
weakly. Here again, the style is "Escape Me Nevei'." It is not only
rough and has been well adapted to
the subject. 'city's towers seen through a window,
In the other group, perhaps the with the harsh lines of the tall build-
most outstanding work is Louis Lo- ings subdued to the extent that they
zowich's lithograph, "Storm Clouds are not out of spirit with the rest
Above Manhattan." The artist here. of the scene.
gives a small view of the familiar' Stiking a completely dillerent note
sky-line with great masses of dark in Burton Spruance's "'Spinner Play,"
clouds above. At one point the sun a lithograph filled with motion and
struggles through the heavy clouds power. The scene is a close-up of a
and lights the towers of a few tall football play, and by using little de-
buildings. Lozowich has succeeded tail the artist has given an impres-
in giving a beautiful view of New sionl Of great mass and of living mo-,
one of the finest of the recent English
pictures, but is superior to many of
those of any country.
The sioi'y is that of a half-stai'ved
girl who is picked up ini Venice by an
extremely selfish English musician,
whose brother, also in Venice, is in
love xvith a snobbish English gentle-
woman. The waif marries the comn-
posem' and. back in England, endeavors
to support hinm while he writes a ballet
and unknown to hei' meets his broth-
er's amour secretly.
Unrecognized, poverty stricken, and
worried about her sick baby, Gemma
icalizes that her husband is as nec-
esam'y to her as she is to him, even
though he leaves her on the evening
the baby dies in order to attend a
r'eheam'sal of his ballet.
Thei'e are thi'ee particularly note-
worthy scenes in "Escape Me Never,"
one in which Gemma visits the
wealthy girl, another when her baby
dies in her arms, and the final epi-
sode; and these scenes have an emo-