TRE MICHIGAN DAILY 'WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 193& THE MICHIGAN DAILY - - 1936 Member 1937 Associded CoIde6iae Press Distributors of Co e6iate Di6est Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. 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 newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO. EEOSTON. -SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES - PORTLAND -. SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR .................ELSIE A. PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR ............FRED WARNER NEAL ASSOCIATE EDITOR ........MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Departmental Boards Publication Departmente:Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; James Boozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver- man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, Mary Sage Montague. Sports Department: George J., Andros, Chairman; Fred DeLano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Marca. Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham,,Helen Douglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER ...............JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......JEAN KEINATH Departmental Managers Jack Staple, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising. Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: TUURE TENANDER THlE FORUM 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 editors reserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Paternalism At Mosher To the Editor: On behalf of the 439 other residents of Mosher- Jordan, I wish to protest against the closing sentence of the article in Tuesday's Daily on the proctor system in Mosher Hall. Your article stated that Mrs. Ray believes that the girls like the plan. If Mrs. Ray honestly believes that, she knows far less about the girls under her care than we think she does. If Mrs. Ray honestly examined the situation, she would find that the girls do not like the system- they hate it. I wish to explain why we hate it. In the first place we feel that it is one of the functions of the University to help us learn to think for ourselves. Apparently, from the talks given in Orientation Week, the very ones who are now doing their best to keep us from think- ing for ourselves on the question of studying were the ones who urged us at the beginning of the year not to keep to the established ruts of thought, but to use our own minds on problems. We admit that all of us may not use what freedom we have to the best advantage, but surely even the Dean of Women will admit that one cannot learn how to use one's freedom wisely by having that freedom abridged. In the second place, in the words of the old adage, one can drive a horse to water, but you cannot make him drink." And driving us to our books every evening will not make us more studious, except of ways to get out of it. In fact, we feel that such a system will drown that "thirst for knowledge"- which the orientation speakers praise so highly. Furthermore it is definitely unfair to establish a system in the dormitories and let the sororities go unscathed. Why should those of us who can- not join sororities be forced to abide by rules which are not in force in sororities. In a sup- posedly democratic institution, this is certainly an example of the privileges of the rich. For a fourth reason, we have the fact that girls have been hired to act as spies and jailors on other girls of thei own age. Mrs. Ray may talk about girls being hired solely because they pos- sess "tact, confidence ,and respect" of the rest of the girls,' but we doubt very much whether four girls out of 200 possess these qualifications. If they do, they certainly haven't shown it so far. It is doubtful if anyone has much confidence in a person of her own age who has been hired to watch her, especially when she knows that the "proctor" will be backed in her every act by the authorities. Furthermore, we feel that the "proctor" systemI is an imposition on those who cannot defend themselves. We have to live in the dormitories- they are much the best places in Ann Arbor. We think it is because Lloyd knows that we won't move that she has dared to force on us a system not of our own making or suggesting (this in the face of her protestations of belief in student self- government), a system utterly foreign to our ideas and one which must conform only to her ideas of how we ought to conduct our lives. This belief is borne out by the report that when a protest against the proctor system was registered in the dean of women's office, the official merely showed the list of names of those who want to get into the dormitory and re- marked that "if the girls didn't like it, they. knew what they could do about it." I would like to print my own name, but not wishing to make enernies of the czars in the dean of women's office when they can regulate so much of my activity, I will sign this, -A Mosher-Jordanite. More On Paternalism To the Editor: Residents of Mosher Hall are up in arms over the introduction into dormitory life of a newf system of regimentation which threatens to undermine the very foundations of university life. Ever since the first "co-ed" trod the Mich- igan campus in search of higher learning, so- called, feminine students have chafed at the restriction in activities entailed by the need to keep hours; regulations of this sort can be justified. Now authority has seen fit to pro- mulgate an ordinance which requires that girls at Mosher must be in their own rooms after 11:15 p.m. The only exception to this rule is that a girl may go to another girl's room in order to study there. Other girls have been appointed to see that these visits actually are for the specified purpose. What shall be the nature of the punishment for violation of the new nle has not been made known, but it has been intimated that punishment will take the usual form of social probation. Before attacking the system itself, it should be stated that this treatment is unfair. Why should dormitories be singled out for this ex- periment? All league houses and sororities are exempted. Furthermore, the 'plan tends to undermine the characters of the girls who are chosen to be monitors. The establishment of a system of paid spies, euphemistically called proctors, is unsportsmanlike, un-American, and provocative of jealousies, dislikes, and unpleasant relations. Nobody likes a "tattle-tale." One of the main purposes of a university is to promote independence of thought on the part BENEATH **** ****** IT ALL A --By Bonth W iiams- MARSH SHULMAN blew in from Dallas this morning with a wistful look in his dark eyes, stories of swing bands at football games, and minus his heart which now belongs bag and baggage to the beauty and belles of the romantic South. "Also the convention was quite worthwhile," Marsh smiled, but here he is to tell you the whole story himself. Marsh Shulman: Dear Bonth: From the moment that a taxi-driver was polite to me and drove with caution as I left the station in Dallas, I knew that this was going to be no ordinary experience. From that time on, the courtesy and friendliness of everyone-from bell- hop to university president-was heart-warming. People would stop ih public places and introduce themselves when they saw the bewildered look on my face, and I bethought myself of the hostility that passes between people up here, even between students on the campus. We stopped in at some of the fraternities on the Southern Methodist University campus, which is, you know in the outskirts of Dallas, and at one--it was the Lambda Chi house-the boys entertained us with songs and a bit of friendly conversation. One of the lads had ridden most of his life up in the Panhandle, and he con- sented graciously (with none of the false modesty we sometimes meet) to sing some of the cowboy favorites for us. Fraternity Row out there doesn't include many houses, and they aren't very im- pressive when compared to some of our local mansions, but they do house a group of genuine and likable young men; perhaps, Bonth, their unimpressive structures haven't keyed them up to the high standard of formality and artificial social standards such as more luxurious quarters might have done. The campus of S.M.U., by the way, resembles exactly the movie conception of college. The campus is spacious, with spreading green lawns and an illuminated fountain, and its buildings are uniformly of the Southern Colonial architec- ture-not, as here, a collection of heterogeneous styles and periods. We bumped into their home- coming celebration last week-end, and were in- vited to the barbecue pep meeting held before the game. There everyone was gathered to sing the songs, cheer the president, and eat some of the most appetizing barbecue I've ever tasted. Among the invocations was one addressed to the Deity to put generosity in the hearts of men that they may remember their Alma Mater with gifts. If we do anything like that here, Bonth ,we'd bet- ter specify what we want, or we're liable to get another football stadium instead of men's dorms or more endowments for faculty salaries, which we really need. And then the football game was a real experi- ence. In the first place, their stadium wasn't a very expensive structure, and they probably didn't have to worry if the team should lose how they'd be able to pay off the bonds. As you know, Bonth; this probably has an effect on the extent to which professionalism enters football recruiting. And then, the most amazing thing of all was their band. They were swing bands, and they played the latest in syncopated col- legiate numbers. There was a girl cheerleader who did one of these dances-I don't know what you'd call the dance, but it involved considerable anatomical displacement, and I think President Ruthven wouldn't like it-but down there it seemed all right and everyone enjoyed it, myself included. Every third play down there was a pass, which made it nice for the spectators be- cause a wide-open game such as they play is fun to watch, even if we don't know anything about football, The band, as I started to say, handles not only the conventional concert stuff of college bands, but also produces swing stuff very ca- pably. You asked about the convention, Bonth, and I would have enjoyed it except for one thing. Last year you remember that John Flaherty went to the convention for the Michigan chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, and John organized a "90 Proof Club" of competent imbibers. Some of the dele- gates, remembering John, expected this year's delegate from Michigan to maintain the high standards and large capacities of the Club, and I did my best, but don't give credence to the stories you might have heard. As a matter of fact I don't really remember an awful lot about the Club, especially what happened later in the evening ..,- One further thing, Bonth, that I know you particularly would be interested in. In all my life I've never seen a more complete collection of beautiful women than that which Dallas pos- sesses. On the campus, in hotels, everywhere in the city, these breath-taking southern gals- with the mellifluous voice, melodic tone, rhyth- mic accent and little habits of speech like "Y'all" -simply took the heart out of the convention. They certainly are hospitable. And lovely. And gracious. And I didn't want to come home. By the way, Bonth, how come y'all didn't reply to that wire for more money I sent yo'? -M.D.S. students eye askance of all isms. This is the avowed aim of the university. It can be best attained by the exchange of ideas through con- versation with others. The new system thus does away with one of the major functions of the university. Furthermore, a girl who has reached college age is old enough to govern her own actions. If she feels that she has prepared her lessonI well enough for the morrow, she should be Contemporary, A Reviewy By PROF. NORMAN E. NELSON (Of The English Department) S EDATELY and with the reticence becoming the highest browed campus publications, Contemporary has hurled a bombshell. I refer not to the "Red Ants Explode From Hill" in Mr. Kirschbaum's highly evocative Still Life, but to the evaluation of changing objectives and methods of education in our colleges in What Th- Colleges Are Doing. Mr. Stubbes, whose identity is not traceable in campus directories, has tried to un- derstand the students'* needs and how the college may meet these needs. Too often they are not met; the stu- dnt who comes to us, as most do, unable to think sustainedly, to write or speak his thoughts clearly, even to read profitably a paragraph of thoughtful prose, is assumed by those who are valiantly upholding "college standards" to be able to do all these things, or at most to need only a se- mester or so to achieve that difficult competence. The student is soon aware of what is impossibly expected of him and he learns to bluff, to conceal the hol- lowtin hisaunderstanding by the use of terms and statements which he doesn't comprehend but which seem to pass current all around him. He learns to choose courses in which some skilled enthusiast will enjoy literature for him whie he quakes responsively as at a movie. He learns to prize highly those courses in which brilliant instructors c a r r y him through the history of profound changes in social organization or in culture with such , rapidity that he has no time to grasp any social or- ganization or why there is such a thing, or to understand any one cul- ture, or even to grasp fully what one writer thought and felt. Consequent- ly his own powers to read, t think, and to write effectively have not been developed. He has not had an edu- cation; he has not even been ex- posed, as we say, to an education; he has, been exposed to the results of someone else's education. Mr. Stubbes would have us con- centrate our efforts not on covering ground, not on keeping the machin- ery of grades and degrees working smoothly, not even on interesting the student, but on developing his pow- ers to read, think, and write effec- tively. To that end it is suggested that the student be tested by general examinations at fairly long inter- vals to determine the progress he has made in assimilating, under- standing, and integrating his studies. Since general examinations have al- ready been adopted by several of our best colleges, Mr. Stubbes hopes and believes that "ultimately degrees will be awarded not because students do well in signal practice, but because they prove that they can perform ca- pably in Saturday's game." I find myself in hearty agreement with Mr. Stubbes and regret only that he had no space in which to point out the difficulties in reorganizing de- partments so that they would be able to educate their students. At present too many departments are organized as trade schools for the turning out of Ph.D.'s in this or that; even the courses for freshman and sophomore, if one examines them closely, are in some degree perverted by the major objective of the department, which is to win kudos as a Ph.D. mill. If a reading of Mr. Stubbes' article were followed by a reading of President Hutchins' Higher Learning in Amer- ica it is possible that even our edu- cators might be educated. I am afraid that my enthusiasm has been heavily drained by this one article among many excellent things in Contemporary which may attract other readers more. The high de- gree of competence shown by the contributions in the short story and in poetry impresses upon me the com- paratively low level of college publi- cations twenty years ago. Maybe things are not as bad as Mr. Stubbes and I fear; but I suspect that most of these bright young people have ed- ucated themselves while being car- ried more or less effortlessly by the machinery. THEATRE Chaliapin Don Quixote By JAMES DOLL ONE of the pictures some of us have been urging the Art Cin- ema League to bring here is the G. W. Pabst production of Cervantes Don Quixote with Feodor Chaliapin. It has now fitted into the schedule and will be shown at the Mendel- ssohn this Friday and Saturday. The possibilities of this novel on the screen and of Chaliapin's singing and acting are so great that one is apt to be skeptical as to whether these would be used as effectively as theygmight be especially we who are used to Hollywood pictures. But this picture has few, if any of the faults of most American pictures made from favorite novels. Although it follows the novel closely in the episodes, it has done snore in terms of pure cinematic :echnique than most picturized nov- els. The important things, of course, y DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the PresideMn until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Peep Peep.... WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 1936 VOL. XLVII No. 45 Notices Freshmen from the following schools are reminded of the confer- ences with their principals in the Registrar's office Thursday, Nov. 19: Ann Arbor, Battle Creek, Bay City, Birmingham, Carleton. Chelsea, Cranbrook, Dearborn, Detroit (Cass, Central, Chadsey, Cooley, Country Day, Denby, Eastern, Mackenzie, Miller, Northern, Northwestern, Per- shing, Detroit-Redford, Redford- Union, Southeastern, Southwestern, Western), Ecorse, Ferndle, Flint, Grass Lake, Grosse Pointe, Hazel Park, Highland Park, Howe, Jackson, Kalamazoo Central, Kingswood, Lansing, Manchester, Marshall, Mi- lan, Monroe, Mt. Clemens, Muskegon Heights, Northville, Oak Park, Owos- so, Pentwater, Plymouth, Pontiac, Port Huron,.River Rouge, Royal Oak, Saginaw, St. Joseph, Stanton, Ver- milion, Wayne, Wyandotte, Ypsilan- ti. Ira M. Smith, Registrar. Upperclassmen: Former students of the schools listed above are invit- ed to stop in at the Registrar's Of- fice Nov. 19. If you will call Exten- sion 373 you can learn at what hours your principal will be having inter- views. Ira M. Smith, Registrar. Freshman Instructors: Principals and teachers from 66 high schools .will be in the Registrar's office Thursday morning, Nov. 19, to con- fer with their former students. Yoti are invited to stop in to meet the principals and talk with them. Ira M. Smith, Registrar. Students, School of Education: Courses dropped after Wednesday, Nov. 25, will be recorded with the grade of E except under extraordi- nary circumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for removal of incom- pletes will be Saturday, Nov. 21. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information will be open to registration by stu- dents Wednesday through Saturday of this week, Nov. 18-21 inclusive. t Blanks may be obtained at the office, 201 Mason Hall, hours 9-12 and 2-4 each day except Saturday, when the office will be open 9-12 only. Both seniors and graduate students, as well as staff members, are eligible for the services of the Bureau. Both February and June graduates are urged-to register at this time, as this is the only general registration to be held during the year. There is no charge for this service, but after No- vember 21 all students taking out blanks are subject to payment of $1 late registration fee. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received announcement of the following United States Civil Service examinations: (Requiring B.S. de- gree or experience substitutions). Senior and welding engineer, Navy department, salary, $3,800 to $4,600. (No degree required). Supervisors of Alphabetic Dupli- cating Key-Punch Operators, Alpha- betic Accounting-Machine Operators, and Horizontal Sorting-Machine Op- erators, salary, $1,620 to $1,800. Un- der Card-Punch, Alphabetic dppli- eating Key-Punch, and Horizontal Sorting-Machine operators, salary, $1260 to $1440. Field Assistant (En- tomology) with optional branches, salary, $2,000. For further information concern- ing these examinations, call at 201' Mason Hall, office hours, 9 to 12 and 2 to 4 p.m. International Dinner: Attention is called to the fact that all acceptances to the International Dinner must be in my office, Room 9, University Hall, same subject which Chaliapin used to sing a great deal was not used in 'he picture. New music was com- posed by Jacques Ibert and one aria by Dargomijsky is used. This has been especially well blended into the scene of the burning of the books which has been used in a dramatic way to close the picture. The English version-the one to be shown here-is, curiously enough, superior to the one in French. This is possibly due to the acting of George Robey in the part of Sancho Panza. Robey is a very well-known English comedian who has appeared in America only once and that was 20 years ago. Chaliapin has the unusual distinc- tion of being not only an opera sing- er but an actor and one who made his singing and actinga unity, blended she two into a single straightforward interpretation of the part in ques- :ion. Even in his concert programs phone 303, by 4:30 p.m. today (Wed- nesday), Nov. 18. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Academic Notices Botanical Seminar meets today at 4:30 p.m., Room 1139, N.S. Bldg. Paper by F. K. Sparrow "The Chy- tridiaceous inhabitants of submerged insect exuviae." (illustrated). Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Salo Fink- elstein, of Cleveland, well-known cal- culating genius, will give a lecture- demonstration under the auspices of the Department of Psychology at 4:15 p.m. in Natural Science Audi- torium on Nov. 19. The public is cordially invited. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: Alexander Woollcott will ap- pear in Hill auditorium op Sunday night, Nov. 29, at 8:15 p.m. Tickets are now available at Wahr's State Street bookstore. This number re- I places the Bertrand Russell lecture and tickets originally issued for that number will be honored on Nov. 29. Exhibitions Exhibition, Architecture Building: An exhibition of the Ryerson Compe- tition drawings including those of teams working here under the direc- tion of Professors Hebrard and Bailey is being shown in the third floor exhibition room, Architecture Building, Nov. 11 through 18. Open from 9 to 5 p.m. The public is cor- dially invited. Exhibit of Color Reproductions of American Paintings comprising the First Series of the American Art Portfolios, recently acquired for the Institute of Fine Arts Study Room. On view daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Hall, North Gal- lery. Events Of Today Research Club will meet in Room 2528 East 'Medical Building to- night at 8 p.m. The.follow- ing papers will be presented: "Atomic Disintegration by the Cyclo- tron" by Prof. James M. Cork; "Kor- ean Astronomy" by Prof. W. Carl Rufus. The Council will meet at 7:30. Luncheon for Graduate Students today at 12 o'clock noon in the Russian Tea Room of the Michi- gan League Building. Cafeteria serv- ice. Dr. Louis A. Strauss, Isaac New- ton Demmon, Professor of English Language and Literature, will speak informally on "The Community of Scholarship." A.Ch.E.: All Chemical and Metal- lurgical Engineers are invited to at- tend the meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1042 East En- gineering Building. Mr. H. V. Smith, Assistant Superintendent of the Skel- ly Oil Refinery, El Doredo, Kan., will speak on."Petroleum Refining." The first of three short quizzes, on gen- eral topics, will be given to members in competition for a de luxe edition of the "Handbook of Chemistry and Physics." Please bring a pencil with you. Refreshments will be served in the Chapter Room. Mechanical Engineers: The Stu- dent Branch of .the A.S.M.E. will hold a meeting this evening at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. J. H. Walker, superintendent of Central Heating for the Detroit Edison Co., will speak on "Modern Trends in In'dustrial and Domestic heating and Air Conditioning." Stu- dents are reminded that all dues and applications must be in by Dec. 1 in order to be listed in the 1937 direc- tory. Phi Sigma Meeting tonight at 8 p.m., Room 2116 N.S. Bldg. Prof. Dow V. Baxter, forest pathologist, will speak on "Alaska," illustrated with moving pictures. Tryouts for membership to Omega Upsilon Radio dramatic sorority will be held in Morris Hall today. All those interested should meet at the Radio Station, 7:30 p.m. Pi Tau Pi Sigma: Formal initia- tion of the new members is to be held in the Michigan Union tonight at 7:30 p.m. All active members are required to be in uniforms. Freshman Glee Club: Important rehearsal today at 4:30 p.m. Sing for Dean Bursley's luncheon Thurs- day noon. Stanley Chorus: Regular meeting tonight in the League at 7:15 sharp. Besides regular rehearsal, we will discuss the question of pins, and the possibility of an 'Ensian picture. Sphinx: There will be a luncheon meeting at 12:15 p.m. today in the Michigan Union. T WAS with some amusement that we read in yesterday's Daily of the latest use to which government funds are to be put. On the NYA, four women students are to be employed by the Mosher-Jordan dormitory to ascertain that other women students are safely in and in their own .rooms at a certain hour of the evening. Thus the National Youth Admin- istration will preserve not only the morale, but the morals, of the youth of our nation. It is very considerate of the directors of the dormitory to make sure each night that none of their wards "may be locked out in the bitted cold," a painful experience, no doubt, but it is an insulting reflection on the judgment of women students. The question of paternalism as an academic issue hasn't concerned us much, and doesn't 'now, but on a purely pragmatic basis, we wonder if the evil effects of such intimate and detailed supervision may not outweigh the good. Being realistic, we cannot argue that students come up to Ann Arbor with judgement suffi- ciently mature to govern their actions wisely. Complete freedom would probably be disastrous for many. Complete control of living conditions, on the other hand, postpones the maturing pro- cess. The job of those responsible for the life of the students is the difficult one of finding a judicious balance between these two extremes. If the dormitory requires women students to be in at 10:30 each week night, it would see that the University has fulfilled its responsibility. To do more than this, as the dormitory now pro- poses to do, would be to remove any pretense of individual judgment. Within limits, responsibility for the morals of the students rests upon the university, in America. If the intellectual maturity were greater than it is, the students might be ex- pected to govern themselves wisely, or if the academic standards were sufficiently high so that only those seriously interested in the in- tellectual pursuits of universities were admitted, there would be less necessity for official tucker- inners. At Oxford, where paternalism reaches magnificent heights, the men are supposed to be in at nine, may be expelled if they aren't in be- fore twelve, and are not allowed to be seen in taverns or at dances. Yet the academic pro- gram is such that this business of paternalism really matters very little, since, within the walls of Oxford, intellectual freedom is complete. In the world of ideas there is there no paternalism. We cannot be said to offer opportunity for real maturity in either world. If we were interested, as Oxford is, in keeping out influences detri- mental to the Oxford way of life, we would be justified in guarding closely the action of students in their activity outside the college; ,1