AGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURLSDAY, OCT. 7, 1937 REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTIINGS 9Y National AdvertisingService, Inc. College Publishers Reiresentative 420 MADISON AVE.GNEW YORK, N. Y. CNICAGO - BOSTON -LOS ANGELES - AN FRANCISCO Board of Editors IANAGING EDITOR .............JOSEPH S. MATTES EDITORIAL DIRECTORT...........TUURE TENANDER CITY EDITOR...................IRVING SILVERMAN William Spaler Robert Weeks Irvin Lisagor Helen Douglas NIGHT EDITORS:Harold Garn. Joseph Gies, Earl R. Gilman, Horace Gilmore, S. R. Kleiman, Edward Mag- dol, Albert Mayo, Robert Mitchell, Robert Perlman and Roy Sizemore. SPORTS DEPARTMENT: Irvin Lisagor. chairman; Betsy Anderson, Art Baldauf, Bud Benjamin, Stewart Fitch, Roy Heath and Ben Moorstein. WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Helen Douglas, chairman, Betty Bonisteel, Ellen Cuthvert, Ruth Frank, Jane B. Holden, Mary Alice MacKenzie, Phyllis Helen Miner, Barbara Paterson, Jenny Petersen, Harriet Pomero, Marian Smith, Dorothea Staebler and Virginia Voor- hees. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER.............ERNEST A. JONES CREDIT MANAGER ....................DON WILSHER ADVERTISING MANAGER ....NORMAN B. STEINBERG WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ........BETTY DAVY WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES Departmental Managers Ed Macal, Accounts Manager; Leonard P. Siegelman, Local Advertising Manager; Philip Buchen, Contracts Manager; William Newnan, Service Manager;. Mar- shall Sampson, Publications and Classified Advertis- ing Manager; Richard H. Knowe, National Advertising and Circulation Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT I. FITZHENRY Now Let's Drop The Whole Matter. . N OTWITHSTANDING a thorough- ly satisfactory explanation of his now regretted membership in the Klan, Mr. Justice Black finds himself still engulfed in a morass of publicity, this time because two attor- neys have seen fit to legally question his qualifi- cations. Most important of the pair is Albert Levitt, a former federal officer in the Virgin Islands. The other is an obscure Boston lawyer named Patrick Henry Kelly. Grounds for their motions lay, they say, in Section 6, Article 1 of the Constitution. Pertinent to the matter, the second paragraph of the section reads thus: "No Senator or Rep- resentative shall, during the time for which he wa selected, be appointed to any civil office under the -authority of the United States which shall have been created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased, during such time; and no person holding any office under the United States shall be a member of either house during his continuance in office." The added emolument which Levitt bases his objection upon is the bill passed by the 46last Congress (during the period when Black was a senator from Alabama) which made it possible for Supreme Court judges to retire at 70 after a minimum of 10 years of service, with a $20,000 a year pension-that is, continuance at their full saary. But the justiceship of the court to which Black was appointed was not created during his term of office in the Senate. Rather a vacancy oc- curred with the retirement of Justice Van De- vanter. If the President's court bill had gone through and Black had been appointed to one of the new positions then he would have been dis- qualified but as things are, the only "new office" created was that of retired justice at $20,000 a year and Van Devanter holds that position. Until Black has completed the service require- ment for retirement there is no possibility of his violating either spirit or letter of Section 6. How- ever, it would appear that Black is ineligible for the pension upon retirement. Constitutionally he can receive only the former and smaller amount which was provided before the new law.- Washington forecasters believe the motions of protest will be summarily dismissed by the court without comment. The opposition, it would seem, can take it or Levitt. Patrol For The Pirates.. . E UROPE'S democratic diplomacy has added another strike-out to its batting average. The farce of the non-inter vention patrol has been reinforced by the still more pitiful comedy of the anti-piracy patrol, which France and England have instituted to protect their shipping in the Mediterranean from certain "unidentified" submarine assailants, and for which the governments of the two nations are now desperately trying to soothe Mussolini's chronically ruffled temperament. That Il Duce should be offended because defensive move on the part of the nations at- tacked by them an insult tohItalian honor. The ingenious solution to this dilemma offered by the Janus-faced statesmen of Great Britain, has already taken the form of a joint-anti- piracy patrol by all three powers involved. The only thing standing in the way of this arrange- ment whereby the pirates will share in the de- fense prepared against them is that it may not suit Mussolini. Maybe he wants to take complete charge of the patrol as well as the pirates. If he really does, there is at least an even chance that he will be allowed to do so. Cold-Blooded Engineers?. . . T HE ANNOUNCEMENT of the third annual meeting of the Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists and Tech- nicians in Detroit next week, makes us doubt recurrent criticisms which brand all engineers as narrow-minded and anti-social. America, in particular, and the world, in gen- eral, is headed for vast social changes which current research and future inventions may bring about, the National Resources Commission warned President Roosevelt during the summer The engineer, responsible for much of this social progress, can, by his cooperation, enable the government to prepare beforehand to avoid many of the disastrous results of severe technological interruptions. A release from the society indicates that its program will be of poignant interest to the engi- neer in training, who will meet unionized in- dustries upon his graduation. He can avoid the "wishy-washy" organizations which treat only technical problems and, instead, join with a group which will assure him of a courageous, social interpretation of his relation to society. "The convention," the release continues, "will deal with the social and economic aspects of technology and specifically with the problems of the technical profession. It will evaluate the engineers' relation to society and industry, towards whose progress and wealth he is able, by virtue of his highly specialized training, to make a valuable contribution." UNDER THE CLOCK with DISRAELI HURRAH! HURRAH! AND A TIGER! In off the dustblown prairies of the middle- west, torn probably from the sunkissed larynxes of hardy Kansans, that old battlecry of freedom comes once again shrieking into the east with a challenge to us of the beaten classes. Into Ann Arbor last Saturday night it came, for instance, with all the pioneer fervor, right into the city, right onto the Theta lawn. It was a glorious mo- ment, but on the other hand a shortlived one, for once again freedom failed to ring-and the Dekes won out. Peaceful, law abiding, exultant probably in the contemplation of his Kansas forbears, Roy, Heath with his date wound his way along South U. that evening. Peaceful and law abiding he was until up the middle of the sidewalk, strode a silent Deke. Also silent, and in lock step, single file each man with his hands on the shoul-' ders in front of him, there were about twenty behind the first. Roy was perturbed but not daunted when the advancing column refused to budge from the middle of the sidewalk. He also refused to budge. That was too bad. The first man rammed into him, succeeded in shov- ing him back a little, then seeing that Heath intended to be staunch, grabbed him, handed him back to the next man who in turn handed him to the next-and so along the line with the tender finesse of a thwarted Deke. Heath ended in the bushes at the corner of the SAE field. But he got to his feet and rushed again. This time the line was broken, but the twenty swarmed around him and swirled along as far as the Theta lawn, where pleasant Saturday good- nights were interrupted-but just momentarily- this sight of a struggling Roy Heath in an at- titude as completely that of protest as twenty men would permit him to assume. The struggle didn't last long, but just before the twentieth Deke climbed onto Roy's lap, the cry rang across the Theta lawn, "I know you Dekes have your traditions, but out in Kansas a man has his rights too." THE DEKES have been doing this sort of thing-not pushing Roy Heath around- but marching back to their house linked as they were Saturday night, since their chapel was built in 1878. It is one of the oldest campus traditions and one that most students seldom' encounter. Probably as a conciliatory gesture to another custom of long standing-the Dekes were the last of the fraternities to date with co-eds-they meet every' second Saturday night around eleven at their chapel on East Williams just across from the Congregational Church. Afterwards, in silence and in lock step, they march home to the porch where they sing a couple of songs. The whole thing is particularly striking when, in dead winter, the snow is deep and the walking soundless, the line twists up South U. to the Geddes hill. In the cold blue light of the street lamps, it is like some black shadow drifting along the side of the street. The chapel itself looks like some tiny aban- doned Greek orthodox church, stands next to the alley a half block down from State on Wil- liams and to real oldtimers is remembered as being right next door to where used to be a very convenient and flourishing speakeasy during pre-repeal days. IT SE=EMS T HEATREI Rv JAMES DOLT TO ME IBy Heywood Bron Damon Runyon made the most pertinent com- ment on the Hugo Black issue in a column in which one of. his characters said, "The red board is up. What's the use of talking about it?" But there is a nice country around the field of might have been, and before going into the silences I would like to add my two bits' worth to the discussion of what the new Justice should have said. His radio address left me in the uncomfortable position of being compelled to re- port, "Well, yes and no." A fence is the last alley in which I care to prowl. And yet, after a brilliant beginning, it seemed to me that Hugo Black muffed his opportunity. Very few men in public life are courageous enough to run the risk of experimenting with complete candor. And it isn't easy. From the sidelines one may applaud absolute frank- ness, but once you or I are actually put on the spot we will follow the way of the world and try and put the best face possible upon the circum- stances. Specifically, I did not like Mr. Justice Black's excursion into the some-of-my-best-friends school of explanation. That isn't good enough. It has been the first refuge of bigots. I do not think that the gentleman from Alabama is a bigot, although I must admit that he is probably touched with local prejudice. In my opinion, he is several cuts above the bulk of his fellows, and even that leaves him a good many lengths behind the status of being the great American Voltaire. That champion hasn't as yet put in his appear- ance. * *' * * Two Men Of Candor At the moment my two nominations for the post of the most candid man in American poli- tics are Senator Norris and Congressman Maury Maverick. The young fellow from the South- west has more prejudice than the old man out of Nebraska, but at least he recognizes them - and puts them on the record. Once I heard Maury when he was under pressure from a keen and persistent Negro heckler, and I think he made the best answer which was within his reach. He said, "Oh, come, now, you've got to remember that I come from the State of Texas." I wish that Hugo Black had advanced to the microphone in precisely the same spirit. Then he might have said, "Yes, I did join the Klan fifteen years ago, and I joined because of polit- ical expediency. I wanted to get into national politics, and, indeed, I felt that I had something to contribute to the welfare of my country. Down where I lived you couldn't even get chosen as dog catcher unless you played ball with the Klan. And so I played ball. And to make my statement even more frank, I will admit that I used the Klan to get into office and then dropped it when it was no longer of any use to me. "I may say that on the High Bench the two men to whom I am going to turn for aid and counsel are Justice Brandeis and Justice Car- dozo. I think they are the men in the court whose economic ideas go along in the direction in which I want to follow. Anybody who says that I made a compromise with my conscience is correct. It may even be argued that I made an ignoble compromise. But I ask you to judge me from this day forth. From Now On "Nothing that I can promise will be as effective as the things I do. Whether you believe in my political and economic philosophy or not, you ought to be willing to admit that in the Senate my record is consistent and that it is on the side of the progressive tides of today. I do not pre- tend to be a great jurist from a strictly legalistic point of view, but I intend to interpret the prob- lems which come before the Supreme Court in the light of the necessities of the masses. You say that fifteen years ago I behaved with less courage than I should have done. You are right. But watch me from now on. I have learned my lesson." I think that would have made a better speech. In fact, I think that Hugo Black implied all that. I wish he had said it. On The Level By WRAG Yes, rushing will end tonight and the fra- ternity men can start buying text books to cram for the mid-semesters. * * * * But there are so many things doing these days that it does become rather difficult to concentrate on studies. Rushing, football, the World Series, and lovely freshman women have made the professors more uninteresting than ever. Proof of this lies in the fact that every time a prof yells "Order!" to a noisy class, someone usually answers, "One ale, please." The best of these mental lapses occurred Tues- day in a Mechanical Drawing class when the instructor asked, "And if the centers are an inch and a half apart, where would the line be?" One of the sleepy Engineers answered, "Off- Ay . >r nuJ ,j1 Publication in the Bulletin is o ns 'Civersity. Copy rec vedat the of 'caria nFlanders' aet :; 1 00 ams.anSaturday. F YOU usually assume that all for- THURSDAY, OCT. 7, 1937 eign pictures are either tragedies VOL. XLVIII. No. 10 or propaganda or both you will be Student Organizations: Officers of convinced that you are wrong if you student organizations are reminded see Carnival In Flanders at the Men- that only such organizations as are delssohn this Friday and Saturday. approved by the Senate Committee It is gay and intelligent and does not on Student Affairs may insert notices even need the English titles to be in the Daily Official Bulletin. Until perfectly understood even if you don't Oct. 25 last year's list of approved know French. That is because it is organizations will be used, but after thoroughly movie' in the way it tells that date only such groups as have its story and constructs its incidents, qualified for approval this year, by First brought to this country at submitting lists of offiers to the structlve notice to an members of time the University Council on Monday, Oct. 11, at 4;15 p.m., Room 1009 A.H. Agenda: Report of the Committee Relating to the Development of Sta- tistics; Election of vice-chairman and secretary; appointment of standing committees. Rhodes Scholarship: Candidates for the Rhodes Scholarships should procure before the 8th of October an information blank from the Secre- tary of the History Department, 119 Christmas last year, it has been sue- Dean of Students, 2 University Hall, cessfully shown not only in foreign and otherwise complying with the ; I language theatres but in many of the regular picture theatres.s g It is set in the Flemish village of Boom in the 17th century. The Bur- gomaster. when he hears of the ap- proach of a Spanish battalion, is sure that his village will be sacked. So that he pretends that he is dead and leaves the wives and daughters of the town to meet the invaders and work on their sympathies to get them to leave peaceably. They do leave- the next morning. But remember the title of the picture is Kermesse Hero- ique. The settings and costumes are au- thentic-yet not cluttered as so often happens in Hollywood films. They are suggestive of the Little Masters of the period without trying to repro- duce actual paintings. And the pho- tography is quite flawless. When a picture comes to town that has the smart entertainment value that this one has, it is difficult not to get up and shout about it. THEATRE CALENDAR Mendelssohn, Friday and Saturday at 8, Friday at 3:15; Carnival in Flan- ders. Cass, this week, matinee Saturday: Yes, My Darling Daughter. Mark' Reed's comedy with Florence Reed. Cass, week beginning Sunday, Oct. 10, matinees Wednesday and Satur- day: Tovarich. Robert Sherwood's adaptation of Jacque Duval's comedy with Marta Abba and most of the or- iginal New York cast. Mvendelssohn, Sunday, Oct. 17: First program of the Museum of Modern Art's Film Library. Second series. Cass, week beginning Sunday, Oct. 17: Jed Harris' production of Ibsen's A Doll's House with Ruth Gordon. Dennis King, and Sam Jaffe. RADIO) By JAMES MUDGE Music starts the evening off and it's the vocalizing of the Smoothies, the Devore Sisters, and the music of Bill Stoess's band-an NBC feature through WLW at 7:15 . . . We, the People directed by Gabriel Heatter comes along at 7:30 via WJR.. Royal are the guests of Rudy Vallee tonight at 8. Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Edward Arnold, of the movies; and Eddie Peabody, a banjo-man from way back, are the stars of the Variety Hour--WWJ airs it . . . Jim Crowley airs his football forum on the Kate Smith Bandwagon also at 8. Jack Miller's orch and guests help the moon over the moun- tain via WABC ... Those amachuoors are with us again-Major Bowes puts his good and bad almost-artists through their paces at 9 and it comesG through WJR. . . Bing is back! The Committee's rules, will be allowed to exercise this privilege. To the members of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of! the University Senate on Monday, Oct. 18, at 4:15 p.m. in Room C, Ha- ven Hall, Louis A. Hopkins, Secy. Faculty, College of Literature,. Sci- ence and theaArts: Attendance re- port cards are being distributed through, the Departmental Offices. Instructors are requested to report absences to my office in accordance with the rules printed on these cards. W. R. Humphreys,. Assistant Dean. School of Education,. Changes of Election: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, Oct. 16. Students enrolled in this school must report all changes of elections at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, Univer- sity Hall. Membershipl in a class does not cease nor begin until all changes have been thus officially registered. Ar- rangements made with instructors only are not official changes. Identification Cards will be given out in Room 4, University Hall to all students on Wednesday, Oct. 6 from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and on Thursday, Oct. 7 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Card will also be given out during the noon hour of these two days. It is essen- tial that* these cards be properly signed with owner's name and address as they will be invalid until this is done. Please call for your card at once. It will be required for football games. J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students. Students, College of Engineering: Sophomore, junior and senior stu- dents who are working for -degrees in any of the following departments are requested to report at the secretary's office, 263 West Engineering Bldg., unless they have done so this semes- ter. Five-year programs combined with industry. Combinations of any two programs. Mathematics, or combinations of mathematical and technical pro- grams. Physics, or combinations. Astronomy, or combinations. Engineering-Law program. Engineering-Business Administra- tion program. Metallurgical Engineering program. A. H. Lovell, Secretary. Women Students Attending the Northwestern Football Game: Women students wishing to attend the North- western-Michigan football game are required to register in the office of the Dean of Women. Haven Hall, and should see me in 117 Haven Hall during my office hours on or before Oct. 18. Arthur Lyon Cross. R.O.T.C. Tailors will be at head- quarters to take uniform measure- ments today and tomorrow between the hours 8:30 am .to 4:30 p.m. Choral Union Ushers: Last year's ushers may sign up at Hill Auditorium box office between 4 and 5:30 p.m. to- day. New men may sign up Friday 4 to 5:30 p.m. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: Season tickets are now avail- able at the Hill Auditorium box of- fice from 10 to 12 and 2 to 4 daily, Seminar in Probability: There will be a meeting on Friday, Oct. 8, at 3 p.m., in Room 3018 Angell Hall, for those interested in forming a seminar in probability, to discuss the time. Tour to Greenfield Village: Atten- tion is again called to the fact that reservations for the educational tour to Greenfield Village, Mr. Ford's out- of-door museum of early American history, must be made in Room 9, University Hall by noon today. This tour is especially for foreign students of the University but a limited num- ber of American students interested may also be accommodated. The spe- cial bus leaves from in front of An- gell Hall, Saturday at 1 p.m. The fee will be one dollar. Academic Notices Economics 175: The class will meet this Thursday in 215 Ec. (bring slide rules), and this Saturday in 3003 An- gell Hall. E. M. Hover. Preliminary Examination for the Doctorate in Education: The examin- ations will be held on Oct. 14, 15 and 16. Graduate students in education planning to take these examinations should leave their names in Room 4000 University High School at once. Preliminary Examinations for the Ph.D. Degree in Economics: These examinations will be held on Nov. 1, 2 and 3. All those who contemplate writing papers at this time should leave their names and the fields in which they expect to write in the De- partment office as soon as possible. I. L. Sharfman. Lectures University Lecture: Einar Gerstad, Director of the Swedish Academy in Rome will lecture on the subject, "Excavations in Cyprus," on Friday, Oct. 8, 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Sci- ence Auditorium. The public is cor- dially invited. University Lecture. Dr. Edward J. Dent, Professor of Music, Cambridge University, will. lecture on the sub- ject "History of the Fugue" Thurs- day afternoon, Oct. 7, at 4:15 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This lecture given for music students is open to the public, and all those in- terested are invited without adn is- sion charge. Charles A. Sink, President. Events Of Today Institute of The Aeronautical Sci- ences: .The first meeting of the University of Michigan Student Branch of tlhe Institute of the Aero- nautical Sciences will be held on Thursday evening, Oct. 7, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 1042 East Engineering Building. This is an organization (Continued on Page 6) I NOTE I BOOK PAPER s ONLY lOc Half-Pound Package kiE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I . A letter of permission from;oarents old Kraft Hall will once more get on must-be-received in this office not with Crosby doing his usual fine job later than Friday, Oct. 8. If a student of m.cing, tonight at 10. Robbin wishes to go otherwise than by train, Burns will aid the cause, and it's the special permission for such mode of music of Johnny Trotter plus the us- travel must be included in the par- ual fine array of guests-WWJ does ent's letter. the airing . . . Cab Calloway shouts Gette mt his jungle jazz via CBS and WABC at Graduate women are invited to reg- 11-a fine stage band but play a bit ester in the office. out of tune on the air . .. Andy Kirk Byrl Fox Bacher, and his Clouds of Joy do a turn viaI' Assistant Dean of Women. WMAQ at 11:15 . . . It's Father Hines -at 12:30 and through WEAF, and College of Literature, Science and Red Norvo by the lanes of WBBM. the Arts, School of Music, and School Bits: Seymore Simons, retired band of Education. Students who received leader and song writer, returns to marks of I or X at the close of their the air to take the air show of Loch- last term of attendance tviz., semes- invar Rubinoff .. . Movies seem to be ter or summer session) will receive a getting the Big Names in radio all grade of E in the course unless this tied down with fat contracts and it's work is made up by Oct. 27. Students causing quite a flurry along Radio wishing an extension of time should Row ... Joe Sanders in a letter says file a petition addressed to the ap-' that the average collegian is a very propriate official in their school with fine critic of bands-how come Jan Room 4 U.H. where it will be trans- Garber got a J-Hop engagement mitted. here? Robert L Williams Philanthropy Advertisement in the New York Herald Tribune: "Statistician, thor- oughly studied racing systems. In- terested only confidentially passing along valuable information at rea- sonable fee." Of all the world's un- selfish people, there's none to com- pare with the man who has a sure way of beating the races. Instead of piling up a fortune by using the sys- tem himself, he is invariably ready, even eager, to pass it on to others for a merely nominal fee, paid in ad- vance. Toronto Star. USE SPRINKLER TO COOL GRID Something new under the sun-a, walking sprinkling machine used to water the gridiron at the University db C7,J. ,11Qi1 Asst. Registrar. To the members of the University Council: There will be a meeting of 1A production Hollywood mght well covet' 719 Tnes I 2/led Av-}_- every critic ; ; from coast to s