TH MIJI4NCL SAt V~Rt fl'L~T~ I~; 19~9 _ _.j._ MICHIGAN DAILY I I I It 1XI r _N 7.1 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in contro? iof Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the aniversity year and Summ r 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 rights 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 carrfer, $4.00; by mail, $450. REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVIERTIING iY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK N. Y. CHiCAGO *'BOSTON *-LOS ANGELSt - SAN FkAhclsrCo Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1938-39 Editorial Staff Managing Editor . . City Editor . . . Editorial Director . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor . . Associate Editor. . Sports Editor. . Women's Editor . Business Staff Business Manager . Credits Manager . Women's Business Manager Women's Advertising Manager. Publications Manager . Carl Petersen Stan M. Swinton Elliott Maraniss * Jack Canavan Dennis Flanagan Morton Linder Norman Schorr . Ethel Norberg Mel Fineberg * Ann Vicary Paul R. Park Ganson 'aggart Zenovia Skor'atko Jane Mowers *Harriet Levy TAONE undignified senior, this cultural center of America was a bit bedraggled in spots Thursday night. He was in a beer tavern, biding time until exams, when a brother-in-the-bond telephoned that his mother had put in an un- expected appearance to be with her enlightened. son over Mother's Day. At the moment the lad may not have been wholly enlightened, but there can be little doubt that he was considerably lit. Two avenues of escape remained open: to fortify himself further with drink so he could oppose his mother's disapprobation with the urbane flippancy of a stewed senior, or to suppress alto- gether the evidence of alcohol. He chose the latter course, and weaved his way down to a greasy hamburger joint off Main street, where he began to make practical application of a prescription he had heard extolled among his friends-eat- ing thick slabs of raw onion on rye ,bread and washing the stuff down with hot black coffee. After several such doses he realized that he reeked suspiciously of onions, and then remem- bered someone had told him that the perfect antidote for onion breath was milk. Here he made a regrettable error, for it took only one glass of the lactic poison to send him rushing toward the exits. When eventually the senior appeared before his mother, he was bathed in a cold sweat, trembling, and ghostly pale- and the gentle lady almost collapsed from horror-at the sight of her cultured offspring. IUMANITAIANISM in a world gone bar- baric: Dominic Dascola, new proprietor of the Esquire barber shop on Liberty street and graduate of the University, favors laws against cut-throat competition, according to Thursday's Daily. Now those nervous individuals who would evenuse an electricdrazor in lieu of letting a barber shave their Adams' apple, fearing a sud- den neurosis, can return to a normal routine. * * * DIAGONAL PUZZLE Sometimes you speak; sometimes you don't Sometimes I will; sometimes I won't. Example: you spoke yesterday- We couldn't pass without "Good-day!" Today you saw me not at all; We met on the diagonal. (A bug, I think, flew in your eye; You couldn't see and that was why!) Well, I'll be frank; I am confused, Amazed and just a bit amused. The burning question of the week Is: Do you, don't you want to speak? --Anon * * * T HAPPENED one night to three Michigan men on the outskirts of Louisville last Friday. Unwilling, unable and unready to accede to the exorbitant demands for rooms in Derby town, the MUSIC Third Concert The Friday afternoon May Festival Concert of this year, as of previous years, was probably not designed to be of climactic importance; but curi- ously enough, it has usually provided some of the finest work of the entire Festival. This con- cert was no exception. The work of the soloist, Ezio Pinza, bass, and that of the Philadelphia Orchestra was outstanding. The Young People's Chorus, directed by Roxy Cowin, deserve credit for a commendable performance even if it was not a particularly thrilling one. Mr. Pinza's first group comprised three of the better known arias of Mozart. Two of them from "The Marriage of Figaro," "Non piu andrai" and "Se vuol Ballare" and one from the "The Magic Flute," the beautiful "Qui adegno non S'accende." Pinza can readily claim recognition as one of the greatest singers of our day but he has the addeQ distinction of being a uniquely consistent singer. He seems always to be in "good voice," never erratic in pitch or tempo and fully in accord with the spirit of his songs. This afternoon's performance convinced an enthusiastic audience that Pinza has no peer when it comes to singing Mozart. To say that Pinza is to Mozart as Chaliapin is to Moussorgsky would obscure the versatility of both singers but more particularly Pinza who is less a stylist. His second group included the aria "Si la Rigeur" from "La Juive" of Halevy and the equally famous Verdi aria "Il lacerato spirito" from "Simon Boccanegra." The more obvious drama- tic qualities of this group were given fullest exposition by the masterful Pinza, who had, such a short time before, dealt so tastefully with the subtleties of Mozart. The orchestral highlight of the program was the performance of the Beethoven Symphony No. 5 in C minor as interpreted by the ever bril- liant Eugene Ormandy. Any orchestra and con- ductor who attempts to revive this badly over- worked masterpiece is laboring under odds too great for most orchestras and conductors. That the Philadelphia triumphed attests their supreme skill as an orchestra. The Fifth Symphony, un- like the other eight, is more susceptible to an. arid interpretation due to Beethoven's economy of harmonic and thematic material and to the limited dynamic range. It is, therefore, necessary that the solo passages and the tutti be rendered with sympathetic warmth, a maximum of sonor, ity and the skill of virtuosi. Needless to say, the Philadelphia Orchestra meets these require- ments as few orchestras can. --Don Cassel undaunted three decided to sleep in their coupe on the edge of town. They went to bed with the sun at 5:00 a.m. and got up from their enclosed couch three hours later. One was touchy and' irritable. To make conversation one of his cronies queried, "Why so irritable, Bi11?" "Aw," replied the grumpy one, "I got up on the wrong side of the car this morning." * * * POSTSCRIPT: An uncombed fiddler in the second row of the symphony orchestra ought perhaps to be told that some members of the audience attend the Festival with field glasses. NIGHT EDITOR: HERVIE HAUFLER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Open Season On Candidates .. . DESPITE THE Gallup poll's recent forecast that Thomas Dewey and the revived Republican party are heading for victory in 1940, it seems as if the season for presidential booms is as wide open as ever. The past few weeks have witnessed the demise of one favorite son, Robert Taft, and the emer- gence of three more-Stari, Murphy and Wheeler -as possible White House residents while the premature campaign of another, McNutt, will soon undergo rejuvenation. The two Republican "white hopes," District Attorney Dewey and Senator Taft, have been spending much of their time in Washington. Dewey, in the words of Professor Cuncannon, is trying to "learn national politics as fast as he can." It has been bruited about that Dewey is politically innocent and Manhattan's muckraker intends to leave the opposition no campaign ammunition. Dewey has addressed the Gridiron Club, in the presence of both Roosevelt and Taft. Again with Taft, he spoke before the convention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. And, with Taft, he became acquainted with the G.O.P. high command. Dewey's debut was very favor- able; the same was riot said for Taft's. Overshadowed by Dewey on every occasion, the Ohio Senator's Gridiron and editor's society speeches were unimpressive. One can safely pre- dict that Taft's Ohio rival, Governor Bricker, will get more attention from now on. The Ohio Senator seems to have fumbled the ball on the '39 yard line. First of the new possibilities is Governor Lloyd Stark of Missouri. Stark's investigation of Boss Pendergast of Kansas City stamped him as a Western version of Dewey. Aided by Attor- Rey-General Frank Murphy, the Missouri chief executive cleaned his own house and, next morning, found his name among those to be heard from later. Never a rabid New Dealer, Stark is in better favor with the Democratic big-wigs than his isolationist neighbor, Champ Clark. Michigan's ex-Governor Murphy has been tak- ing the Nw Deal spotlight away from Secretary of Commerce Hopkins. Murphy's investigations into the connections between crime and politics have brought him more national notice than Hopkins' well-publicized attempts to appease business. But, like Jim Farley, Murphy's presi- dential ambitions may hit the same barrier of religious bigotry that once confronted A-Smith. Sen. Burton K. Wheeler of Montana has been too busy with railroad legislation to run his own boom. Wheeler, chairman of the Senate Inter- state Commerce Committee, is the choice of middle-of-the-road Democrats since he led the fight against Supreme Court Reorganization. Minnesota Democrats and "those of adjoining states," according to the Associated Press, have already indicated they would support Wheeler for the White House post, if (and this "if" is voiced frequently) Roosevelt did not want the nomination. On June 1, Paul McNutt will retire as U.S. High Commissioner to the Philippines so that he can return to Indiana in time to save his two year old boom. Much has happened to the Mc- Nutt movement since Indiana's former governor left for Manilla. The Hoosier Democratic Party has split and the efforts of Frank McHale, McNutt's Farley, to bring about harmony have not been successful. The American Legion, of TODAY in WASHINGTON -by David Lawrence - WASHINGTON-Although the Na- tional Labor Relations Act was ac- cepted by many members of Congress hopefully as a means of diminishing strikes and labor disputes, the fact remains today that, notwithstanding the many fine opportunities offered labor under that law, a strike damag- ing to the public interest has been going on for several weeks and now is being forced to end by the strong hand of government itself. Thus does the principle made effec- tive in Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy come into use in America be- cause of the arbitrary use of ec- onomic power by private groups of employers and unions. In Italy and in Germany, "sit-down" strikes ard other labor disturbances resulted from the fact that economic groups over- reached themselves and the national government in each case intervened to compel productive processes to be resumed. Tendency Toward Fascism This is not to suggest that there is anything fascist in the action taken by the administration in threatening to take over the mines and force op- eration, but that the conditions which brought on fascism abroad are being repeated in America, so that the de- mand for government action here results precisely as it did abroad from the damage done to the public in- terest. The issue in the coal strike was a form of the closed shop, or, to put it another way, the right of a union to exclude a competing union from se- curing members. The issue was by no means settled by the insistence of the federal government that the miines be reopened Wy as many opera- tors as already have the so-called "union" shop in actual practice. The latter is the type of union-shop which permits existing non-union employes to continue to work, but prohibits the employer from taking on any-J body new except union men. The underlying desire of the Unit- ed Mine Workers is to perpetuate their authority and jurisdiction. This is not something peculiar to the min- ers. The idea of compelling employ- ers to force their new employes to become unionized is upheld tenacious-1 ly by many labor organizations in other industries, too, as essential to their very existence., The theory is that, if an employer cares to do so, he can take on non-union men in such numbers as to overturn the ma- jority of union men employed who have the exclusive bargaining rights. So, to protect the majority status, the unions want to compel employers to agree that, as a condition of em- ployment, men will become members of the majority organization. This is directly contrary to the principle in the Wagner Law which says that em- ployers must not advise their em- ployes about union matters or coerce them into joining or staying out of unions. But the Wagner Law also has a, provision which says it is not illegal for labor unions and employers to make contracts whereby workers must join unions as a condition of em- ployment, provided the existing union wants it that way. In other words, the Wagner Act says that employers must not advise employes about union members unless they advise them one way-namely, that, as a result of contractual agreements, minority em- ployes must join unions. Thus, by saying a closed shop is not illegal, Congress has encouraged disputes on that subject. Doesn't Prevent Strikes The power of the Wagner Act to compel recognition of majority units has had much to do with the present coal dispute, so that it can hardly be claimed that the law in its present form can prevent strikes. There' have been, on the other hand, similar strikes before the Wagner Law was passed. What is important to note is that the law has by no means put an end to the fundamental issues, namely, the right of organized groups to shut down operations unless em- ployers agree to cooperate in forcing men into union membership. The merits of compulsory unioni- zation are by no means a simple case of right on one side or the other, but it is clear that, if unions and groups of employers are to wield hereafter the vast powers over production ex- ercised in the coal strike, or "lock- out," as Secretary Perkins calls it, they cannot continue to do so with- out bringing on a certain measure of ernmentalregulation. Thus, the railway mediation act, if applied to industry generally, would have pre- vented the coal strike or "lock-out." Operations could not have been sus- pended while discussion was going on. And provision for submission of the issues in an orderly way would have prevented the stoppage of produc- tion during the negotiations. Clearly, Congress, which has before it the matter of revising the Wagner Law, may find more instructive testimony in the coal dispute than in the hear- ings going on before Senate and House committees. (Continued from Page 2) maintenance and transportation be- tween Chicago and camp, as follows: July 3 to August 31: Dietitian-house manager (woman with dietetics training). Typist (woman with commercial training). Dramatics (either man or woman; experience in story acting, story tell- ing, puppetry). Nature lore (man with science background). July 3 to August 3. Dancing (woman with experience and training in creative, square, folk and tumbling). 2 group leaders (women).I August 2 to August 31. 8 group leaders. For further information regarding the camp, call at University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, 201 Mason Hall; Office. Hours: 9-12 and 2-4. "PsychologyMaster's Comprehen- sive Examination" will be held to- day at 2 p.m. in Room 3126 N.S. Students in Naval Architecture 6, please see Drawing Room Bulletin Board for an important announce- ment. Graduate Stdents in Education: All individuals desiring to take the preliminary examinations for the Ph.D. in Education to be held on May 25, 26 and 27, must leave their names in my office, Room 4002 University High School, before May 20. - Clifford Woody. Senior Lit Class Dues will be col- lected on Wednesday, May 17, in both the League and the Union. It is im- portant that these dues be paid be- fore Commencement Invitations are received. Literary Seniors: The Cap and Gown Committee has chosen the Moe Sport Shop as official cap and gown outfitters and advises im- mediate placement of orders. No de- posit required. Assembly: Petitioning for Assembly positions for next fall will be reopened to those interested on Saturday and Monday, May 13 and 15. All Inde- pendent women are urged to pe- tition. Seniors. Interesting and instructive bulletins are published by the Univer- sity of Michigan several times a year. These bulletins are mailed to all graduates and former students. In order that you may receive these, please see that your correct address is on file at all times at the Alumni Catalog Office, University of Michi- gan. Lunette Hadley, Director. Academic Notices Candidates for English 197, Honors Course for Seniors: All candidates de- siring to read for Senior Honors in English (1939-40) must file their names with the secretary of the De, partment not later than 4 p.m. on May 15. At the time of filing their names they will leave transcripts of their academic records, including their records for the first semester of the present year and their elections for the second semester. At the same time they will make their appoint- ments for conferences with the Com- mittee in charge of Honors in English. Conferences will be held on the eve- ning of May 17. Bennett Weaver. Examiner in Languages for the Doc- torate: Mr. Vernam E. Hull will be available for consultation with gradu- ate students wishing information on the adequacy of their knowledge of the languages required for the doc- torate. He will also be in charge, for the Graduate School, of examina- tions in these languages. His office is Room 120, ground floor, in the east wing of the Rackham Building. Mr. Hull's office hours are 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and Fri- day. Telephone Ext. 2128 during of- fice hours; other periods, Ext. 331. The usual procedures as previously announced by the Departments of German and French will be con- tinued for the present year and the Summer Session of 1939. C. S. Yoakum. Biological Chemistry Seminar: Saturday, May 20, 10-12 a.m., Room 319 West Medical Building, "Some Recent Vitamin Studies Concerned with the B Complex" will be dis- cussed. All interested are invited. -Concerts May Festival Concerts: The 46th Annual May Festival will be held in Hill Auditorium, May 10, 11, 12 and, 13. The Philadelphia Orchestra will participate in all six concerts. The general programs are as follows: Fifth Concert: Saturday, M~.ay 13, 2:30. Georges Enesco, violinist, so- loist: Saul Caston and Georges Enes- 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 President until :30 P.M.; 11:00 A.M. on Saturday. I doors will be closed during numbers. Holders of season tickets are request- ed to present for admission only the coupon for each respective concert. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architeture: An exhibition 'of pottery and other work in ceramics by leading Michi- gan artists in that field is being shown in the ground floor cases, Architectural Building, through May 13. Open daily, 9 to 5, except Sun- day. The public is invited. Exhibition of Six Paintings by Three Mexican Artists, and Water Colors by Alexander Mastro Valerio, under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art Asso- ciation. Alumni Memorial Hall, North and South Galleries. Last two days, Saturday and Sunday, May 13 and 14, afternoons from 2 to 5. Lectures - Biological Chemistry Lecture: To- day at 10:30 a.m., East Lecture Room (Mezzanine Floor), Horace H. Rack- ham School of Graduate Studies. Dr. Eliot F. Beach of the Children's Fund of Michigan will lecture to the stu dents of biological chemistry and to all others interested on "Studies in the Chemical Composition of Proteins with Especial Reference to the Hemno- lytic Residues of Erythrocytes." American Chemical Society. Prof. G. W. Scott Blair will lecture on "New Aspects of Colloid Science" at 4:15 p.m., Monday, May 15, in Room 303 Chemistry Building. All those interested are invited: Professor Blair is head of the chem- istry department of the University of Reading, England, and part-time lec- turer in colloids, Sir John Cass Tech- nical Institute, London. Events Today Student Senate luncheon will be held this afternoon at 12:15 p.m., at the Michigan Union. The room will be posted on the bulletin board in the Union. All Senators are requested to call Dworkis, 3779, or Scharann, 4929, for reservations: The luncheon is open also to interested students and faculty members. All reserva- tions must be in by Saturday at 11 a.m. The Girls' Cooperative House is holding a tea from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today at 517 East Ann St. All girls interested in Cooperatives are cordial- ly invited, Coming Events Faculty Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to faculty members and residents of Ann Ar- bor on Sunday, May 14, from 4 to 6 p.m. American Association of University Professors. The annual dinner meet- ing of the local chapter of the Ameri- can Association of University Pro- fessors will be held Monday, May 15, at 6 p.m. at the Michigan UniOft. There will be opportunity to discuss the report of the Chapter committee which has been considering the prob- lem of the objective evaluation of faculty services. Because of the wide- spread interest in this subject, this will be an open meeting to which all members of the faculty, whether members of the chapter or not, are cordially invited. Pharmaceutical ConfeFene, College of Pharmacy: The Annual Pharma- 'ceutical Conference sponsored by the College of Pharmacy will be held at the Michigan Union on Tuesday, May 16, at 2:30 p.m. The guest speaker will be Dr. Wortley F. Rudd, Dean of the School of Pharmacy, Medical College of Virginia, who will speak on "Some Present . Pharmaceutical Problems, Socialized Pharmacy, and Working Conditions in Retail Phar- macy." Other speakers will include Dr. Frederick F. Blicke, who will speak on "The Introduction and De- velopment of Antiseptics," and Dr. Malcolm H. Soule, who will speak on "Methods for the Evaluation of Anti- septics." The Evening Meeting will be held at 7:45 in the Amphitheatre of the Horace H. Rackham School of Gradu- ate Studies andewill be addressed by Dr. Carl V. Weller who will speak on "The Pathology of Syphilis as a Public Health Problem." All those who are interested are cordially, in- vited to be present at the Conference. Ann Arbor Independents: There will will be a regular meeting Tuesday, May 16, 4:30 at the League. There will be song rehearsals Monday through Friday in the game room of the League from 4 to 5 p.m. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michigan N~ The Editor Gets Told... In Re Allen-Runmsey Table Manners To the Editor: Mr. David Wiens in his most excellent letter to The Daily neglected to mention several rather important facts about our eating habits. In 'the first place we not only come to dinner without our coats but we come stark nude! In the second place we usually cap off our meals by throwing plates at the waiters and thereby killing (or seriously injuring) two or three of them! The members of the dormitory with whom I have dis- cussed the situation seem to feel that it would perhaps be best for Mr. Wiens to transfer to Purdue University which he seems to regard so highly. -Eugene Geniesse, Jr. To the Editor: The letter of David Wiens printed in the Michigan Daily issue for May 10 was, I am sorry to say, gross understatement. I feel it is now time for a few true facts to be brought forth. At Allen-Rumsey we have two dining rooms. In each a long trough runs the entire length of the floor. Into this is thrown all of our food. The waiters must make their exit and leave at least fifteen minutes margin before the expected entrance of the boys. If a few should linger about,. their general fate is to be thrown into the trough along with the other food. Waiters make lovely fare tasting quite a bit like veal. Last week we accounted for three who were rather new and did not leave in time. There is also an element of danger for the person eating. He may be caught in the rush that ensues the ringing of the dinner bell and trampled to death; or if he doesn't .come sup- ported by several friends he is most liable to follow in the footsteps of the aforementioned hapless waiters. Eating we will admit is rather messy, so we find it helpful to eat without clothes. Some' bashfuf few come in loincloth but the general trend is toward nudity. The boys are really very happy in their "back to nature" element, and we have absolutely no cause for complaint. Mr. Wiens may be complaining because he was just lucky enough to crawl from the trough before being consumed. He was truly fortunate' and' should remain silent in his happiness. I hope no one got the wrong impression from his letter. -A-R Gourmets To the Editor: As residents of Allen Rumsey we would like to defend ourselves against the caustic attack of one of our fellow residents. In case any person is really interested in the question, let him drop into our dining rooms un- expectedly. It is true that he may find manners not befitting an Emily Post gathering but he will also find food not fit to be served to a chain- gang. The majority of our table manners can be directly laid to the discontent of the resi- dents with their meals. At the table, one of the few opportunities we have for conversation to- gether, the sole topic of discussion is the food and not a few disparaging remarks are passed. But let me say they are well deserved. Com- plaints are passed from pereson to person until the complainers are discouraged. So here let me speak for the majority of Allen Rumsey. If the Union or the University is willing to give us digestible food in proportion to the board that we pay, then can they expect a little respect from their idignant customers. -Some of the Residents of Allen Rumsey Daily llini Calls For Labor Truce 6 It has long been a characteristic of industry -call it economic royalty, capitalism, or what you will-to fight within its ranks when compe- tition was worth while, but to team unmercifully in any conflict with labor. Capital's efforts to combine have been curtailed as "in restraint of leaders have insisted on maintaining their rivalry between craft unions in the American Federa- tion of Labor and the industrial groups of the Committee for Industrial Organization. A year and a half ago, an attempt to bring the two groups together failed miserablv. Now