. THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEB. 24, 1938 MANAGING EDITOR..........JOSEPH S. MATTES EDITORIAL DIRECTOR.........rUURE TENANDER CITY EDITOR.............WILLIAM C. SPALLER NEWS EDITOR..............ROBERT P WEEKS WOMEN'S EDITOR.......,......HELEN DOUGLAS SPORTS EDITOR .................IRVIN LISAGOR Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER ..............ERNEST A. JONES CREDIT MANAGER ...--...............DON WILSHER ADVERTISING MANAGER .... NORMAN B. STEINBERG WOMEN'$ BUSINESS MANAGER .......BETTY DAVY WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES NIGHT EDITOR: JACK DAVIS The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The Daily Issues Its Tryout Call. T HE DAILY is more than just another extra-curricular activity. It is, or should be, an instrument of service to the Uni- versity community &rd, in addition, a source of enjoyment and practical training in newspaper work to those who publish it. As a fulfillment of this credo the Daily aims to present the news in an accurate manner and in as complete a coverage as is possible with its existing facilities. Its editorial policy is directed towards interpreting and summarizing the news in an intellectually honest, dispassionate way. That it may constantly render better service to the University and its readers, the editors and reporters of the Daily today are asking for second- semester freshmen and sophomores and other students to come out for positions on any of the various staffs which are immediately responsible for publishing the Daily. There are several advantages to working on the Daily:. (1) Staff members are induced by the very na- ture of their work to read metropolitan papers and magazines of opinion to keep abreast of the news events of the world beyond the campus. (2) Reporters have splendid opportunities for contacts with faculty members that they would lot ordinarily get. (3) As a student organization the Daily draws together students from every field of con- centration and enables them to transcend the ordinary negative hindrances to the forming of widespread, valuable friendships which the very size of the University and its student body auto- matically creates. (4) As a journalistic and literary instrument ;he Daily affords ample opportunity to students to continue their writing both for practice and genuine enjoyment. (5) As orientation into newspaper work, the Daily gives practical experience in the different phases of work needed to publish a newspaper: reporting, editing, editorial writing, headline writing, copy and proof reading and adminis- tration. (6) There is a real enjoyment to be derived! from the day to day creation of a newspaper, something akin, perhaps, to the pleasure which craftsmen must surely feel. This ediorial was prompted in the hope that the Daily will attract the best of the student talent on campus so that it may continue to be one of the country's outstanding college newspapers and so that it may be of greater and more satisfac- tory service to its readers. Joseph S. Mattes. Tuure Tenander. The Student Senate And Congress .*, * BECAUSE of an unfortunate choice of names, there is a danger that two worthy student bodies, both making their opening bids for support now, will be confused and the work of both impaired. Congress, the older of the two, was conceived late last year and launched as an independent men's organization. Its aim, according to a pamphlet available to all students interested, is service and organizational work will be subor- dinated. The campus has been divided into 10 zones of approximately 400 independent men, each with its own officers elected to a coordinating body, international matters and local affairs as they bear on these events." Campus skeptics doubt the efficacy of such an organization and claim that it will degenerate to a debating body. Such criticisms, made at the outset, may deter the Senate. It needs support; it needs the support of competent leaders to make i successful. Senate data are also printed and have been posted. Joseph N. Freedman. ART By WILFRED B. SHAW John Taylor Arms Nothing could surpass the infinite delicacy and refinement of the etchings of John Taylor Arms now showing in the second floor of Alumni Memorial Hall. The artist is president of the Society of American Etchers, and one who visits this exhibit would understand why the etchers of America pay this tribute to the man, simply as a super-craftsman in his field. He is more than that, however. His prints, in composition and design, as well as draftsmanship, reveal a real artist. There may be those who, while they admire the extraordinary refinement of his treatment of the details of stone, traceries and textures, are re- pelled a little by the meticulous quality of his Mlates, which must represent an infinite amount of the hardest kind of work. Nevertheless the themes he has chosen in the hill towns of Italy and the cathedrals of France give almost all his plates not only a pictorial but a dramatic quality which make them all well worth studying. The artist has shown his love for the grotesque in Gothic architecture in several gargoyle plates which are well-recognized characteristics of his work. Particularly in his plate "Le Penseur de Notre Dame" it seems apparent that etching can go no further in the representation of textures and yet preserve the effectiveness of the plate as a design. The same is true of the "Amiens" where the unbelievably accurate representations of textures on the houses are only incidents in a well-designed plate with a strong foreground and delicate tracery in the distant church. Particu- larly interesting is a plate in which the artist has combined with another well-known etcher, Kerr Eby, to produce "Medieval Pageantry" where the latter has provided a boldly drawn and very human procession passing before the towers of a church which was drawn by Arms. j Several plates, not the least effective of the group, represent American scenes, of which the one "Cobwebs," showing parts of New York's bridges, is particularly interesting. The exhibit is decidedly one that should be seen, studied, and admired. In the south gallery there is also to be found a very interesting display of drawings, etchings, and paintings of an Italian-American, Umberto Romano, now instructor in the Painting Depart- ment of Wooster Art Museum. He has won sev- eral prizes and studied in the American Academy in Rome in 1906 under a Pulitzer scholarship. Gvalloping Europe Austro-German developments are now in that stage where rumor and counter-rumor, half- truth and untruth, mingle to perplex not only the peoples but apparently the statesmen as well. London is busy denying rumors that ,British . leaders knew beforehand of Reichsfuehrer Hit- ler's intentions to turn Chancellor Schuschnigg's complaints at Berchtesgaden back upon himself. Rumors of a German military alliance with Italy in reward for Il Duce's "lying low" during the Austrian crisis will be denied only as, when and if their usefulness is exhausted. But among the speculations that crowd the cables a few considerations stand out as still pertinent to an assessment of the new weights Herr Hitler's political penetration of Austria has thrown into the European balance, One is that the German advance in Central Europe so far has been at the expense, not of the Communist state of Soviet Russia, but of a member of the anti-Comintern group, whose Fas- cist leader, only a matter of weeks ago, was feted with all the pomp Berlin could muster for him. Another is that Italy cannot well oppose Ger- many in Central Europe while Germany is neces- sary as a silent partner in Premier Mussolini's Mediterranean moves. German activity in Aus- tria has not been the work of German-Italian partnership but an undertaking purely for Ger- man advancement, and one which may tell Pre- mier Mussolini that Herr Hitler will not always have need of him. Again, the German minority question affects not Czechoslovakia alone, where it is of concern to France-and to a lesser extent to Britain-but German minorities, in that racial sense which underlies the Pan-Germanic ideal now being felt in Austria, occupy also Italian territory in the Tyrol, territory which Italy gained at the expense of the Germanic peoples after the World War. Reports of agitation by the League for German- ism for "redemption" of South Tyrol already are given direction to prophetic stiaws. Until it is known just how much ground Chan- cellor Schuschnigg has yielded before the Ger- man "drive toward the east," predictions of events to come are only-predictions. Not that German policy has veered from the line set for,it by Herr Hitler when he assumed leadership of the German nation. Nor that it shows signs of veering. Today the question is one of pace rather than direction, as our comments on the German cabinet shake- up pointed out. Developments have broken into a gallop the last few days, but they may settle down to a walk in the next few.I -Christian Science Monitor. The Lynching Bill Mississippi is considering an anti-lynching bill Jifeew ib 1e 1Heywood Broun WASHINGTON, Feb. 23.-The yeast of eco- nomic strife and organization begins to fizz in the most curious places. I dropped off the rattler from Miami intent upon spending a quiet afternoon at some spot where there would be no talk of politics, labor problems or any other serious subject. And so naturally I decided to drop in at the bar of the Na- tional Press Club, the most staid of all journalistic fra- ternities. Imagine my surprise to be greeted with the cry of "Join the picket line" the moment I came through the portals. It seems there'has been a schism. The bar was deserted, while some fifty or sixty rebels were lined up at the tables on the other side of the room drinking their own liquor out of large bottles in order to deprive the ruling powers in the organization of any profit in the sale of mixed concoctions. It would be presumptious for a non-resident member to take sides in such internal strife. Moreover, the only information which I have at the moment comes from the Insurgent Group. It is their assertion that the ruling powers have passed an ordinance that from this time forth each bartender must address a member as "Sir," and not by his given name. They Say It's Against Tradition The rebels contend that this is against tradi- tion. In- the old days, according to the seces- sionists, it was customary for an erring brother to say, "George, I have a terrible hangover this morning, and not a nickel on me." Under such circumstances it was not unknown for the bartender to reply, "That's too bad, Bill, why not have a whisky sour on the house?" But as a result of some such incident, George was suspended for a week, whereupon the rebels took up a collection sufficient to double his fine, and they also firmly resolved to boycott the bar. As I have said, it would be unclubby for a visitor to take sides in an internal dispute with which he had not fully acquainted himself. But I'm no one to pass a picket line under any circumstances. This demonstration is, a combined picketing ,nd the sitdown technique, retaining the best fea- tures of each. "Free men deserve free drinks," seems to be the slogan of the embattled reporters. I took a drink. Indeed, I fear I violated neutrality by going to the nearest lunch room and getting two bottles of buttermilk with which to sustain the pickets. After all, I might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb. "You came in here at just the wrong time, Commissar," a friend assured me. "This started two hours ago, but you'll get the blame." knd that I gravely fear. There Ought To Be A Union In Miami when I was buying a two-dollar mu- tuel ticket, which.I did not cash, the seller said, "Mr. B., we ought to have a union here in these windows. Will you help?" And when that comes to pass I suppose I will be barred from Hialeah as well as the Press Conference of President Green, but it was not my idea. There is some slight consolation in the fact that I met a fellow sufferer right after the third, or as Mr. Widener has it, "the 3 o'clock race," in Flor- ida. I ran into Bill Dineen, and as he approached I thought, "There's General Johnson. Does he bear down on me in peace or anger?" But it was Bill Dineen who used to pitch for the Red Sox, and who is now an umpire. I spoke of the resemblance between him and the columnist, and he said, "Yes, I've found that out. I'm trying j to rest down here and forget about umpiring, but people are always coming up saying, 'I enjoy your work, but of course, I don't always agree with you.' " Expectant Fathers For some inscrutable reason buried deep in the folklore of the race, the plight of the man who expects to become a father is supposed to be funny. Of course it isn't anything of the sort, but that apparently doesn't matter. The picture favored by the jokesmiths and the cartoonists is of a terribly worried fellow, jittery and in need of a drink, who paces feverishly up and down hos- pital corridors (sometimes, heaven help us, ac- companied by his mother-in-law) bothering peo- ple, making foolish questions and driving himself crazy. All right. Leave it that way. Now the Western Hospital Association has opened an ex- hibit space in San Francisco "to articles designed to help the worrying male through hours of anx- iety." It is said that most hospitals provide no regular quarters where prospective fathers can "smoke, read or walk the floor in relative com- fort." Let them do all this sort of thing they like, and it still will have little effect. The spur- ious notion that a man about to become a father is a comic figure will not die so easily. This idea appears to have become so ingrained in people that even doctors and nurses, who surely ought to know better, usually enter into the spirit of the hollow jest and have a whale of a good time for themselves. Not all the "comfortable smoking rooms" in Christendom can change it. -New York Herald Tribune. "Without waiting for the slow improvement of human nature through eugenics, great progress can be made toward the 'good society' by the bet- ter development of the capacities we already pos- sess." Dr. Edwin Grant Conklin. rofessor emer- Syncopation By TUURE TENANDER Tommy Dorsey The rafters in Yost Field House must have thought on Tuesday night that the Conference basketball cham- pionship was being decided on the floor below. The bleachers were filled with students clapping, stamping and or whistling while the powerful lights shone down on the hardwood court. But the rafters were wrong. The causes for the din raised from the stand were 15 men and a girl. (We refuse to recognize the gentleman who moved the microphones around as a vital factor of the festivities). Needless to say, most of the cus- tomers left the scene of battle raving about the band. Tommy Dorsey put on a well-balanced program, one to satisfy all types of listeners. The gentlemen who stood out were Thom- as himself on trombone, Bud Free- man on tenor, Johnny Mince on clar- inet, Peewee Irwin on trumpet, How- ard Smith at the piano and Maurice' Purtill on the drums. As could have been expected, Tom- my's tromboning at times reached brilliance. His tone and technique were of the highest order and he had the ideas when he needed them. His sweet solos were also of the finest. Bud Freeman, who has seen better days, achieved some fine results in Loch Lomond and several other tunes near the end of the program, but it seemed for the most part that Bud lacked ideas. After two or three choruses he would lapse into techni- cal exercises that had no beauty ex- cept precision. Johnny Mince played some fine clarinet at intervals and his efforts were enthusiastically received. Pee- wee Irwin's trumpeting was better than at thebother times weahave heard him but he is still far re- moved from Bobby Hackett and Nor- man Ayres. Maurice Purtill's drumming dis- played excellent technique and an obvious admiration for Gene Krupa but was slightly lacking in taste. The former Norvo man kept pecking away at his cymbals a bit too consis- tently. He seemed to forget that sticks and snare are still a pretty goodcombination, not to mention his rather neglected woodblock. His work on ride choruses carried a strong rhythmic lift. Oneof the best features of the pro- gram was The Origin of Swing. Al- though admittedly limited in scope, the musical sketch was interesting and enlightening. And enlighten- ment was sorely needed, for many; members of the audience were clap- ping on the on beat and some were even clapping off three beats to a; measure. Bix Beiderbecke's In A Mist and Candlelight were highlights on< the program.; It was unfortunate that the sceneI had to be laid in the Field House. For certain officials to deny the use of Hill Auditrium, obviously the place for the session, is ridiculous. Long-haired musicians need not fear the boys who have their pates clipped a little closer. We hope that the1 gentry in charge of Hill Auditorium will not refuse any of the May Festi- val artists the use of the hall on the ground that they have appeared in Carnegie Hall, lately besmirched by Benny Goodman. FEREUM W'hite Elepaints Jonny, my little boy 5 years of age,r with a sad tone in his voice, awakened me saying, "Papa, someone has2 knocked over our elephant." At first I could hardly gather what he wasI talking about, then I realized that just the evening previous, the small children and myself all combined in an effort to fashion out of the recentg snow, a large white elephant. We built it large and wide aq-id thought that we had made it quite solid and resistible to winds or qr-c dinary conditions. Jonny had to watch the progress t of work from the window as he had a c cold but our boy of 7 and our boy ofv 11 both worked strenuously in rolling D snow balls over the lawn towards the building up of our big white elephant. They had considerable pride in it and were looking forward with much t anticipation to showing their friends u and neighbors what we could build in our front yard.k During the night, however, some husky male-as his foot prints weree left at the base of the snow-came" around and with a degraded feeling1 of fun in his premeditated havoc he had the pleasure of gratifying his selfish interests in pushing over and seeing his muscular energy and cute mental turn of mind receive satisfac- tion at other's expense., After seeing our own white ele-j phant made into ruins, I noticed thatI a number of other snow statues inr the neighborhood have been de-t molished in a similar manner.- I am wondering if, to an adultt mind, the gratification that comesi THURSDAY, FEB. 24, 1938 VOL. XLVIII. No. 102 Smoking in University Buildings: Attention is called to the general rule that smoking is prohibited in Uni- versity buildings except in private of- fices and assigned smoking rooms where precautions can be taken and control exercised. This is neither ,a mere arbitrary regulation nor an at- tempt to meddle with anyone's per- sonal habits. It is established and enforced solely with the purpose of preventing fires. In the last five years, 15 of the total of 50 fires reporter, or, 30 per cent, were caused by cigarettes or lighted matches. To be effective, the rule must necessarily apply to bringing lighted tobacco into or through University buildings and to the lighting of cigars, cigarettes, and pipes within buildings-including such lighting just previous to going outdoors. Within the last few years a serious fire was started at the exit from the Pharmacology building by the throwing of a still lighted match into refuse waiting removal at the doorway. If the rule is to be enforced at all its enforcement must begin at the building entrance. Further, it is impossible that the rule should be enforced with one class of persons if another class of persons disregards it. ft is a disagreeable and thankless task to "enforce" almost any rule. This rule against the use of tobacco within buildings isperhaps the most thankless and difficult of all, unless it has the winning support of every- one concerned. An appeal is made to all persons using the University build- ings-staff members, students and others-to contribute individual co- operation to this effort to protect University buildings against fires. This statement is inserted at the. request of the Conference of Deans. Shirley W. Smith. All Students in the College of L.S. & A., and Schools of Education, For- estry, and Music receiving a grade of I (incomplete); X, (absent from ex- amination), or (.) (no report), should make up all work by March 14 or the grade will automatically lapse to an E. Students who handed in manu- scripts in the Freshman Contest are asked to call for them in the Hop- wood Room on Wednesday, Thurs- day, or Friday afternoon of this week. R. W. Cowden. Following the practice of many years a series of talks and discus- sions designed to acquaint studentsl of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and others interested with the preparation necessary for admission to the various professionali schools of the University has again ben arranged. This series of talks will be given as follows: March 3, Law, Dean H.' M. Bates, 1025 Angell Hall. March 8, Dentistry, Dean R. W. Bunting, 206 Dentistry Building. March 10, Pharmacy, Professor H.1 B. Lewis, 313 W. Medical Building. March 15, Library Science, Dr. W.3 W. Bishop, 110 Library. March 17, Medicine, Dean A. C.< Furstenberg, 1025 Angell Hall, March 22, Business Administration, Dean C. E. Griffin, 1025 Angell Hall. March224, Music, Professor E. V. Moore, 1210 Angell Hall. March 30, Engineering, Dean H. C. Anderson, 225 W. Engineering Build- ing.t March 31, Education, Dean J. B. Edmonson, University High School Auditorium.c April 5, Nursing, Miss Marian Du- I Yell, Lobby of Couzens Hall. April 7, Forestry, Dean S. T. Dana,r 2045 Natural Science Building. r April 21, Architecture, Dean W. I Bennett, 207 Architecture Building. April 26, Graduate Studies, Deant C. S. Yoakum, 1020 Angell Hall. All of these talks will be given att 4:15 p.m. of the dates scheduled. Participants in Extra Curricular' Activities are reminded that certifi- cates of eligibility received from the Office of the Dean of Students must' be submitted to the managers orr chairmen of activities in which they wish to participate on or before. March 1. Managers and Chairmen of Extra Curricular Activities are reminded that they must file with the Chair- man of the Committee on Student Affairs the names of all those who have presented Certificates of El- gibility and a signed agreement to exclude all others from participation Blanks for this purpose may be se- cured in the Office of the Dean of Students. Summer Work: Jewish girls, 19 years old or over, who live in the Metorpolitan Area of New York City and are interested in assistant camp counseling, are asked to call at the University Bureau of Appointments.+ It is essential that the girls be in the Metropolitan Area for personal in- terviews during Spring Vacation. Po- sitions are open in almost all activi- ties, swimming,;nature lore, pioneer- ing canoeing, and arts and crafts. alternative lecture hour is Thursdays at 5, for those who cannot meet with the class for the published hour Wednesday at 11. Same place; Room 246 West Engineering Building. English 190: The class will meet at the Union. Bennett Weaver. Geography 111: Supplementary final examination. A supplementary final examination in this course will e iven Friday, Feb. 25 at 2:30 p.m. in Room 19 A.H., for those students who failed to take the final exainina- tion at the regular time. History 11, Lecture IV. The lecture will not meet on Thursday, Feb. 23, at 8 a.m., but section 29 will meet as usual at 11 a.m. Thursday. History 82: This course will not meet on Thursday, Feb. 24. Make-up Examinations in History: The make-up final examinations in all courses will be given at 3 p.m. Friday, March 4, in Room C, Haven Hall. Students who have missed more than one final examination in his- tory should call at the History De- partment Office before Friday, Feb. 25; to make arrangements to avoid a conflict. Students must get a note from their instruct r before Friday, Feb 25, and presen this note at the time of the final examination. No stu- dent will be permitted to take the examination without written per- mission from his instructor. Please see your instructor during his regular consultation hours. Ex- cept in the case of students who have missed more than one final examina- tion in history, this is the only make- up examination which will be given in history. Hygiene 210: Adult Health Edu- cation, will not meet Saturday, Feb. 26. Exhibitions An exhibition of paintings, draw- ings and drypoints by Umberto Ro- mano is offered by the Ann Arbor Art Association in the South gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall, and an exhibition of etchings by John Tay- lor Arms in the North Gallery, Feb. 14 through March 2. Open 2 to 5 p.m. daily including Sundays, admission free to members and to students. Exhibition, College of Architecture: A showing of the Margaret Watson Parker collection of Pewabic pottery, the work of Mary Chase Stratton; is now on display in the central cases on the ground floor of the Architec- ture Building. Exhibition, College of Architecture: Big Ten Art Exhibition, consisting of representative student work in drawing and painting, architectural design and sculpture, murals, cera- mics, and applied design from the following universities: Chicago, In- diana, Northwestern, Purdue, Illi- nois, Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Michigan. Open daily ex- cept Sunday, Feb. 23 through March 8, 9 to 5. The public is cordially in- vited. Lectures Professor A. R. Morris will give the annual mid-year faculty lecture (i the English Journal Club on Feb. 25, at 4:15 p.m., in the League. The faculty, members and guests are cor- dially invited to attend. Professor Paul Mueschke will make an import- ant announcement at the business meeting at 4 p.m.; all members are urged to be present. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: Salvador de Madariaga, for- merly Spain's Ambassador to the United States and to France and Delegate to the League of Nations, wil lspeak in Hill Auditorium on Thursday, Feb. 24, at 8:15 p.m. His subject will be "What is Peace?" Tickets are now available at Wahr's State Street Bookstore. Lectures: Professor Conrad H. Moehlman, Ph.D. of the Colgate- Rochester Seminary will present two public lectures in Natural Science Auditorium: Thursday, Feb. 24, 4:15 p.m. upon "Has State Conquered Church?" and Friday, Feb. 25, 4:15 p.m. upon "Is the United States Christian." La Sociedad Hispanica announces the second lecture of its series, Dr. Charles N. Staubach will talk on "Ciencia e Invencion Espanolas," Feb. 24 at 4:15 p.m. in Room 103 R.L. Building. Prof. Hanns. Pick will give an il- lustrated lecture on "Schweizerische Volksmusik" today at 4:15 in Room 2003 Angell Hall. This is the third of a series of lectures sponsored by the Deutscher Verein. Mr. Paul R. Krone, professor of floriculture at Michigan State Col- lege and executive secretary of the Michigan Horticultural Society will DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI Publication in the B3ulletin is constructive notice to ail members of the University. Copy received at the offce of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; i1:00 a.m. on Saturday.