THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday. during the University year and Summer Session 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 tights of republication of all other matters 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. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38 REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsoN AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON LOS ANGELES SANFRANCISCO Board of Editors Managing Editor . Robert D. Mitchell Editorial Director City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Book Editor Women's Editor Sports Editor Albert P. Mayio Horace W. Gilmore Robert I. Fitzhenry .Saul R. Kleiman ..Robert Perlman . William Elvin Joseph Freedman .Earl Gilman Joseph Gies .Dorothea Staebler . . . . . Bud Benjamin ,; 'I :, i Business -Department Business Manager . . . Philip W. Buchen Credit Manager . . Leonard P. Siegelman Advertising Manager . . William L. Newnan Women's Business Manager .. Helen Jean Dean Women's Service Manager . . Marian A. Baxter NIGHT EDITOR: JUNE HARRIS The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. It is important for society to avoid the neglect of adults, but positively dangerous for it to thwart the ambition of youth to reform the world. Only the schools which act on this belief are educational institu- tions in the best meaning of the term. -Alexander G. Ruthven. T The Editor Gets Told., A Bouquet For The Daily To the Editor: Here's a parting word of appreciation for last year's Daily and the expression of a hope that it will continue to be a true avenue of student expression. Realizing the difficulties of the average news- paper being independent of the advertising bias, it seems to inethat the Daily, being relatively free, is in a strategic position to give-the public an aggressive interpretation of events in line with the free tradition of the American univer- sity. If the administration of the University, which contributes a large sum for the DOB, could strike some kind of a balance with the students who subscribe to the paper, the result would be all to the good. Personally, I favor a large degree of freedom in the expression of student opinion. Specifical- ly, this means an unfettered Daily, a student- centered peace strike against war, and an in- creasing degree of student government. I would also include the recognition by the University of leftist student groups so that they might have their meetings on campus: -Rev. H. P. Marley. pFor Reform In Politics To the Editor: The plan proposed by the -Men's Council for an electoral college to replace campus-wide elections has the following defects: 1. It will increase rather than decrease "dirty politics." The possibility for log-roll- ing will be vastly increased where there is a small body of uninstructed electors in in- timate contact with each other. One need not have a great imagination to envisage the great pressure that will be put upon a few students who have important campus posts at their command. 2. There will be no opportunity for cam- pus-wide expression of opinion on specific issues. Very often an election is joined with a very definite campus issue. This was the case in the recent elections to the Board of Control of Student Publications. The turn- out at that election indicates that campus elections can be vital and important, if they involve real issues. 3. It will eliminate practical experience in the mechanics of democratic elections. The fact that these elections have not been properly conducted in the past or that "dirty politics" have been connected with them is not an adequate reason for abolishing them. Rather it should be an incentive to reor- ganize them so that they can be properly conducted. It is a sad admission to say that the students of our University cannot conducta clean, intelligent election. I do not think that this is the case. I would like to suggest that much of the dif- ficulty arises from the fact thatthe student- body is unacquainted with the viewpoint of the candidates. This may be partially remedied by statements in the Daily and public rallies at which the candidates present their viewpoints. The elimination of useless offices suggested by the Men's Council should make this practicable. -Ronald Freedman. Justice Cardoza's CrOss.. The Washington bureau of the Star-Times re- ports that Justice Cardozo may resign from the Supreme Court next January. The great jurist, who has dignified the Court of Appeals in New York and the high bench of the nation, is bur- dened with ill health. It has been sad to see, in so many of the precedent-setting decisions of the Supreme Court in recent months, that Justice Cardozo was unable to participate. In his first five years on the court Cardozo voted with the famous dissenting wing, Brandeis and Stone. 'Now that liberal minority has become the liberal majority, many principles for which Cardozo contended have been accepted as the law of the land. And the justice himself has been deprived of the privilege of helping formulate the opinions. Yet he enjoyed the first triumph of his ideas. It was just a year ago that the great break- through began and the Supreme Court returned the constitution to the people. Cardozo helped form the narrow majority in those historic mo- ments. If happily Justice Cardozo's fears for his health are too pessimistic, it will be a grateful nation which views his return to active service. -St. Louis Star Times. Christian Democracy 3. Christianity has ever been a liberator. Even imperfectly practiced, it has freed men's minds from the oppressions of hate, selfishness and superstition. Increasingly political institutions have reflected that freedom. .The relation has again been called to attention at the New Eng- land Methodist Conference by a statement of Alf M. Landon: If Christianity does not achieve its aims, democracy cannot succeed. Iifeemsrto M eywood Broun The "Women's Rebellion" began in Suffern, N.Y. Mrs. Sarah Oliver Hulswitt and Mrs. Charles P. Bispham, wife of the Episcopal rector, came together over the tea cups and\ resolved to lead a fight to curtail fed- eral relief for the unem- ployed.t I imagine that nobody * .:-:* starves in Suffern. It re- mains one ,of our loveliest suburbs and the milling mobs of hungry men and womenin Cleveland are a long way off. As Mrs. Hulswitt said to the Committee on Appropriations of the United States Senate, "Our husbands and fathers have to work all summer." That is quite true, and even in the club car the ride home from the city is often hot and dusty. And though the Rev. Bispham does not have to commute, his lot must be at times extremely, difficult. I seem to see him in his study pre- paring a sermon and racking his brains as to some method by which to make the story of a certain rich young man palatable to his parish- ioners. "He went away sorrowful; for he had great possessions." * * * * Suffern Might Not Approve It was after this encounter that Jesus said, "It is easier for a camel to go through tle eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God." The Bible records that, "When His disciples heard it, 'they were exceedingly amazed." And I have no doubt that the good ladies and gentlemen of Suffern, N. Y., would be equally startled if the rector were to remind them. Of course, he could explain that the words were an example of Oriental hyperbole. And yet, if the, maker of inspiring discourses went on and paused to consider the parable of the beggar Lazarus he woud find no better ma- teria for the purposes of his congregation. The gentleman who was clothed in purple and fine linen, was rigorously set against a spending pro- gram, and Lazarus did not linger long upon the dole of crumbs which fell from the table of Dives. No, that story could hardly supply a text which would please the revolutionist of Suffern. "He hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives. and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised." But again the good rector would be forced to shake his head. Decidedly this could hardly be doctrine to warm the cockle of the community heart in Suffern. Things Which Appall Mrs. Hulswitt made a plea to the Senators to heed the piteous plea of "the people who have to work so hard to pay for these appalling expenditures." The expenditures are appalling. But I wonder whether Mrs. Hulswitt or Mrs. Bispham has ever seen a breadline. When thou- sands of homeless persons stand on the border- line of starvation-and there are those who have crossed that line-that, my dear Mrs. Hulswitt, is also appalling. Pump priming is merely another way of say- ing "immediate relief," It will not suffice to say that these things can be done in time. And it will be difficult to tell the frightened horde in Cleveland that private charity or State or muni- cipal action can attend to these things. 'The simple answer is that it hasn't. I am willing to grant that Mrs. Hulswitt and Mrs. Bispham may have acted out qf the best possible motives over the tea cups. But these matters cannot be settled in any such way. The ladies will be well advised if they forget Suffern and go out to where the woe begins. Before they urge less for the masses let them look first at the legions of the unemployed. Let them look at their faces. Fascism Begins 'At Homeoo The display of home-grown Fascism furnished by Jersey City and Mayor Hague should have the continued attention of Americans. Not that there is great hope that outside intervention will insure free speech and other constitutional lib- erties. Indeed, the attempted spectacular inva- sion of Haguedom by two congressmen actually boomeranged-arousing local sentiment and clouding the issue. The invoking of the kid- napping law by Norman Thomas or of the an- cient conspiracy law by Attorney General Cum- mings is also of doubtful wisdom. Straining federal laws is a poor substitute for the local civic consciousness which is the most effective guardian of liberty. There may be outside influences which will help. The right kind of word from Washington might convey to Mayor Hague a conviction that official hoodlumism does not enhance his social standing or party prestige. Liberty Leaguers who publicly ruled the Wagner Act unconstitu- tional might lend a hand to the Constitution now by privately persuading the Jersey City Chamber of Commerce that Hagueism is a bad business which it cannot afford to support. But all outside effort should recognize that really effective correction must come by a change in thi tahnlina ofemti7.n a ffcals who see THEATRE By NORMAN KIELL Dorothy Sands As a "special added attraction" to the Ann Arbor Dramatic Season, Dorothy Sands will appear at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre this Sun- day evning in her program of "Styles in Acting." "Styles in Acting," our foot notes tell us, "is the enacted story of the Anglo-American theatre from the time of the Restoration in England, when women first appeared on the stage, down to the present. Miss Sands tells of styles in theatres, styles in audiences, styles in costume, styles in acting during that period. She presents great scenes from noted' plays, impersonating famous actres- ses in their stellar roles." Studied Artist Miss Sands made her debut just six years ago in New York City at the Booth Theatre .At that time, Burns1 Mantle, drama critic of the Daily News, said that she had a wider1 range than Beatrice Herford, a more limited range than Ruth Draper, and a fluffermore engaging humor than any of them . . . Miss Sands, happily free from any desire to obtrude, perfectly content with what she has seen that she enjoys reproducing, and blessed with a sense of humor that is gorgeously keen and impishly exact. . From Miss Sands, you get per- fection in the art of the intelligent, imatatrix, because you get some- thing moxe than mere vocal inflec- tions. You get character and study and a close approximation of perfect art as well." Progran Varied. With this testimonial, Miss Sands appearance here should be well worth witnessing. Her selections will: be a bit different from those given here three years ago. The seven num- bers include "Millamant," in "Thef Way of the World," by William Con- greve; "Almahide," in "The Con- quest of Grenada," by John Dryden; "Madame Vestris"; "Nellie Hatha- way," in "The Silver King," by Henry Arthur Jones; "Candida"; "Annie Christie," in Eugene O'Neill's play; impersonating Pauline Lord in her original role; and lastly, Lady Macbeth's sleep walking scene as it might be portrayed by Haidee Wright, Ethel Barrymore and Mae West. Dorothy Sands comes to Ann Arbor from her world premiere pefformance of "Alcestis" at Harvard's Sanders theatre. It is a modern version of Euripedes' tragedy interpreted by the Poets Theatre of Harvard, which al- so premiered T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral." Miss Sands' role of Alcestis was particularly solemn, it is reported, but she enacted it well. Last Lion Of Judah 4.. He was too ill to perform the pain- ful and hopeless office he had under- taken when he appeared before the Council of the League of Nations at Geneva two weeks ago. Again, he was "too sick 'in mind and body" to attend a London meeting which he was to address. And anything Haile Selassie might -have said to the London audience would be as fu- tile as were the poignant words ut- tered by the spokesman to whom he delegated his task at Geneva. The London crowd, it must in self- respect be believed, would have given the exiled Emperor a kindlier hear- ing. No one would have interrupted to say impatiently, as Lord Halifax said at Geneva: "No cause is served by vain lamentations.i They were just ordinary people in that London crowd.', No one of ministerial rank~ was there; no one with a riband in his coat. If such a personage had been present out of curiosity, he would prudently have kept silence But the disillusioned ex-ruler of an humble kingdom could only send re grets. So London and the world wer spared the humiliation of listening t another expression of "vain lamenta tions." Haile Selassie had a fine faith in the honor of the nations. He com- pletely trusted the pledges embodied in the Covenant of the League. Tc him, in his remote, backward, im- poverished land, Geneva was a shiel and buckler. It was the gurantee of his pitiful territory's integrity. I symbolized the resurrection of hu inanity's conscience after an im maesurable atonement. No such naive vagaries beguile( Mussolini. He knew his official world So he proceeded on his conquerinj way, contemptuously pausing to flinp at all the chancelleries: "With Ge neva,, with Geneva, against Geneva. Geneva has now come supinely 1, heel. The signatories to the Cove nant have been absolved of any ob ligations in that instrument. Th conquest of Ethiopia is, in the lan guage of diplomacy, a fait accompl The heartless cynicism of Lor Halifax flaunts an effrontery Ma chiavelli might have shrunk from t One wishes, foolishly, of course, for V Zola to intemize the ignominy of tI Powers with another "J'Accuse." E . win Markham's muse is too wearil DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the Vuiverstty. Copy received at the ofce of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. (Continued from Page 2) Administrative Board. Nominating Committee: Professors R. C. Angell, Rene Talamon, and Paul S. Welch (chairman). 4. Resolutions on the retirement of the following members of the Facul- ty: Associate Professor G. C. Cone, Professor E. W. Dow, Professor J. W. Glover, Associate Professor J. A. C. Hildner, Associate Professor Mar- garet Mann and Professor C. L. Meader. To All Students Having Library Books: 1. Students having in their posses- sion books drawn from the University are notified that such books are due Monday, June 6. 2. The names of all students who have not cleared their records at the Library by Tuesday, June 7, will be sent to the Recorder's Office, where their semester'scredits will be held up until such time as said records are cleared, in compliance with the regu- lations of the Regents. Wm. W. Bishop, Librarian. Comprehensive Examination in Education scores are available in the office of the School of Education, 1437 University Elementary School. Officers of Honor Societies and Professional Organizations: At a re- cent meeting of the Committee on Student Affairs the following resol'- tion was adopted: RESOLVED: That the officers of honor societies and professional or- ganizations be notified (1) that such groups are expected to comply with standard of financial responsibility as are other student groups, and to con- duct initiations and other public meetings in an orderly manner and (2) that they will be required to demonstrate their capacity to comply with such standards of responsibility and orderly conduct; RESOLVED FURTHER: That a sub-committee of the Committee on Styident Affairs be appointed to examine the present fi- nancial conditions and conduct of such organizations and to discuss with their representatives methods of as- suring future compliance with the standards applicable to all student so- ieties. The Maison Francaise, 1414 Wash- tenaw Avenue, Ann Arbor, will be open for the coming Summer Session under the auspices of the French De- partment of the University of Michi- gan. Application for residence must be made through the Office of the Dean of Women. Room and board will be ten dollars a week. A fee of two dollars for the term will be charged. The English House, 1501 Washte- naw Avenue (Sorosis house), will be open to graduate students in English for the coming Summer Session un- der the auspices of the English De- partment of the University of Michi- gan. Rooms will be $30 and $35 for I the eight-weeks term. Board will be k $6.50 a wek for breakfast and din- ner. Application for residence must be made through the Office of the Dean of Women. The following schedule. will mark the lifting of the Automobile Regu- lation for students in the various colleges and departments in the Uni- versitlr. Exceptions will not be made for' individuals who complete their work in advance of the last day of class examinations. All students in thefollowingddepartments will b required to adhere strictly to this schedule. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: All classes. Tuesday, Jun ' 14, at 5 p.m. College of Architecture: All classes - Tuesday, June 14, at 5 p.m. e College of Pharmacy: All classes o Tuesday, June 14, at 5 p.m. - School of Business Administration All classes, Saturday, June 11, at 1 senior, please present identificat on card when applying for tickets. Herbert G. Watkins Registration Material: Colleges of L.S.&A., and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry and Music: Summer Session registration ma- terial may be obtained in Room 4 U.H. Please :see your adviser Anid-se- cure all necessary signatures bore June 24. First Mortgage Loans: The Univer- sity has a limited. amount of funds to loan on modern well-located Ann Arbor residential property. Interest at current rates. Apply Investment Office, Room e00, South Wing, Uni- versity Hall. Senior Women: Get your recheck examination at the Health Service before graduation. Appointments for this examination may be had by call- ing the' Health Service, 23248. The examinations will be given until June 10. English 6, Report Writing: Last semester's students in English 6, Re- port Writing, Engineering College, can get'their' last semester's reports by calling at Room. 9, University Hall, at any regular office hour beginning Monday, June 6. Mechanical Engineering Seniors and Graduate Students: You are request- ed to fill out an information sheet for the Department of Mechanical Engineering, upon the presentation ,of which you may receive your'copy of the group picture. Hopwood Contestants: All contes- tants are requestged to call for their manuscripts at the Hopwood Room on either Thursday or Friday after- noon, June 2 or 3. Copies of the judges' comments on individual man- uscripts may be obtained at the desk. Senior Engineers: Commencement Announcements will be distributed through Friday of this week, from a d esk outside the Mechanical Engi- neering office in the West Engineer- ing Building. Hours: 9:00 to 12:00 and 1:00 to 3:00. Please present your orders imme- diately, as it will be extremely in- convenient to make distribution later than Friday. School of Music Seniors. Senior an- nouncements may now be obtained rt the School of Music building. Hours posted on bulletin board. Commencement Announcements: The Burr, Patterson & Auld Com- pany, 603 Church Street, will begin their distribution of Commencement Aniouncements on"June 1. An extra supply of booklets and folds are like- wise available and may be secured by those who failed to place their orders. Senior Engineers: Those who have not yet obtained their Commence- ment Announcements ore requested to do so immediately, since the dis- tribution will be very inconvenient after today. Hours: 9 to 12.and 1 to 3 at' the Main Bulletin Board in West Engineering Building. Any engineers buying announce- ments from Burr, Paterson and Auld will please be sure to signify that they are engineers, so that the pro- ceeds will go to the proper class! Rochdale Cooperative House: Ap- plications for membership for the coming Summer Oession are now be- ing received. Application blanks are available in Dean Olmsted'k' office,' Room 2, University Hall, 'or at the RochdaledCooperative House, 640 Ox- sford Road. e Academic Notices Anthropology 32: Room assgn- nents for Final Examination. Stu- dents whose names begin with A to L nclusive report to Room 25 A.H.; all >thers to Room 231 A.H. 2' E.E. 7a, Building Illumination, will Nave its final examination on Fri- . lay, June 10 from 8 to 12 o'clock in doom 445 West Engineering Building S. it top of north stairway. Those few who have conflicts may procure the questions from me, and write the ex- 4' amination, as soon thereafter as practicable. s- H. H. Higbie. Social Legislation In The Right Direction. .. T HE CONSUMERS' interest, long neg- lected in the "social" legislation of the nation, has been given new recognition as a result of a recent act of Congress which has not been given the publicity and celebration its importance deserves., This measure, the Wheeler-Lea Act, effective May 21, amends the Federal Trade Commission Act to include, "un- fair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce" as well as the "unfair or deceptive methods of competition' clause it already contains. Spe- cifically it prohibits false and deceptive adver- ising practices by the addition of four new sections to the original d act. ,The need for'this amendment was seen several years ago when a "cease and desist" order of the F.T.C. against the makers of Marmola, an obesity cure, was taken into the courts. A lower federal court upheld the order on the ground that the product was harmful to the public, and should be kept from the market. The Supreme Court, basing its decision on the legality and not the expediency of the order, said, "If the necessity of protecting the public against dan- gerously misleading advertisements of a remedy sold in interstate commerce were all that is necessary to give the Commission jurisdiction, the order-could not be assailed." But the order was not upheld because the Commission could not show that "competitors" were injured. In all such cases, harm to consumers was not a legal consideration. The only other recent attempt at this type of reform was made in the Copeland Bill. Here, direct amendment of the Pure Foods and Drugs Act was planned. The opposition given it by druggist and advertising interests was so vigorous that, when it finally emerged from a Congres- sional committee, it was so weak and disfigured, that it did not pass. The Wheeler-Lea Act, however, employs a new strategy. Rather than striking directly at "in- terests," it sets up, thro.ugh the addition of four new sections of the Federal Trade Commission Act, the mechanisms for stamping out false and misleading advertising as applied to "food, drugs, devices, or cosmetics." So, in the newly amended act, the "unfair or deceptive practices" clause plugs an old loop-hole, and the four new sections give explicit legislative permission for the con- trol of advertising. Specifically, these additions make it unlawful to disseminate any false ad- vertising through the mails or any other means to induce the purchase of foods and drugs. Fur- thermore, the advertising agency, publisher, or broadcaster is liable to punishment in the event that the manufacturer of the product cannot be located. Although this measure was badly needed. and long in coming, it cannot in all fairness be ex- pected that the Commission will immediately noon. School Tuesday, School Tuesday, School tion: All of Education: All classes June 14, at 5 p.m. of Engineering: All classes June 14, at 5 p.m. of Forestry and Conserva classes. Tuesday, June 14 at 5 p.m. School of Music: All classes. Tues day, June 14, at 5 p.m. School of Dentistry:' Freshma, class; Wednesday, June 8, at 12 noor Sophomore class; Friday, June 3, a 12 noon. Junior class; Saturday June 4, at 12 noon. Senior clasE Saturday, June 4, at 12 noon. Hy gienists; Tuesday, June 7, at 5 p.m. Law School: Freshman class; Tue, day, June 7, at 5 p.m. Junior clas Tuesday, June 7, at 5 p.m. Seni class; Wednesday, June 8, at noon. Medical School: Freshman clas Thursday, June 9, at 12 noon. Soph more class; Saturday, June 11, atl noon. Junior class; Saturday, Jur 11, at 12 noon. Senior class; We nesday, June 8, at 5 p.m. Graduate School: All classes, Tue day, June 14, at 5 p.m. Candidat for- Masters' Degree; Tuesday, Jul n nl. at 'Y, S; Y- s- s; or >s; 12 ne d- s- ,es ne English I and II Final Examination Schedule, Tuesday, June 7, 2 to 5 p.m English II Ackerman, 3231 A.H. Allen, 3209 A.H. Baum, 201 U.H. Calver, W. Phys. Lect. Dean, 205 M.H. Ellinger, 2215 A.H. Everett, 203 U.H. Giovannini, 205 M.H. Green, 103 R.L. Haines, 103 R.L. Hanna, 103 R.L. Hart, 1020 A.H. Hathaway, 16 A.H. Helm, 225 A.H. Knode, 1209 A.H. Nelson, 101 Ec. Ogden. 229 A.H. ;