-I-THE MICHIGAN DAILY:-- . IICHIGAN DAILY McLaughlin Pays Tribute To Strauss; States PolicyOf Publications Board 1, ._I . Ij' - The FLYING TRAPEZE - By Roy Heath - 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 3:30; 11:00 a.m: on Saturday. TA 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 rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. . Entered at the PosttOffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISiNG 'BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Refresentative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO ' BOSTONI ' LOS ANGELES - SAN FRAINCiSco Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1938-39 M anaging Editor Eitorial Director City Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor .Associate Editor Book Editor Women's Editor Sports Editor Board of Editors " - Robert D. Mitchell. Ir Albert P. Maylo * . . . Borace W. Gilmnore Robert I. Fitzhenry * . . . S. R. Kleiman, Robert Perlman' - .Earl Gilman - - - . William Elvin . Joseph Freedman " Joseph Gies - .Dorothea Staebler - . . Bud Benjamin (Editor's Note: The following address by Prof. William A. McLaughlin, chairman of the Board in Control of Student Publications, was delivered at the annual banquet for members of the Daily editor- ial staff given by the Board last Thursday.) Members of the Board, members of the Daily editorial staff: Let me in the name of the Board and in my own express to you our pleasure at having you with us this evening. Some of you are old acquaintances, old friends and collaborators, others of you are with us for the first time, new friends, new collaborators, because we all, have, in common a deep interest in the success of the Daily and a common purpose, namely to main- tain the high standard it has achieved and to exact every effort to improve it. At this point it is fitting that a few words should be spoken in tribute to the memory of Professor Straus who was in large measure responsible for whatever excellence we may have attained. Long a member of this Board and for several years its chairman, he had retained the enthusiasm of his younger days for college journalism and endeavored to imbue the younger generation with the high ideals whereby he was constantly guided. Kind in admonition, vise in counsel, tolerant, free from partisanship or bias, yet steadfast in his adherence to well-founded convictions, frank, patient and sympathetic, Professor Strauss endeared himself to all who came in contact with him. Loyalty to his University, constant concern for her good name, love and respect for freedom characterized him as member or chair- man of this. board. To all students and col- leagues alike, he was a staunch, a faithful friend. The death of this gentle gentleman fills each and every member of the Board with a deep sense of personal loss. I should like, now, for a few moments, to turn to a consideration of the Daily. As you doubtless kiow mast head states "The Michigan Dailey edi- ted and managed by students of University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications." This state- ment should set at rest any lingering doubts there may be concerning the relation of the staffs to the Board. On the editorial side the publication is entrusted to the managing editor with the immediate active collaboration of the editorial director and the city editor. It is quite evident that the Daily should be free from even the suspicion of partisanship, prejudice or bias. Those who write for it should be keenly alive to their responsibilities to the entire student body, to the University as a whole and to the body politic, and act accordingly. Alert to the possi- bilities of the Daily, they should seek to be in- structive even when critical, as objective, as well-informed and as accurate as possible in all matters even when personal sentiment, political beliefs, or ideological considerations might tem- per them to act otherwise. The Daily must not be a vehicle for the presentation of the ideas or program, directly expressed or subtly insinuated of any one party, group or clique. I am confi- dent no thoughtful person would have any desire that it should be. Clearly, the Daily should not open its columns under any pretext to personal attack or abuse. Great caution should be'exercised in the choice of material for the "Forum" or "The Editor Gets Told" (If that be the proper heading). Column- ists should be extremely careful not to let their enthusiasm, inspiration or love of cleverness blind them to the possibly unpleasant conse- quences of their remarks. After all the Daily is essentially related to the University. That fact must not be forgotten. The University with its schools, colleges and in- stitutes, its libraries, museums and special col- lections, dedicated as it is to the preservation, spread and advancement of knowledge in all its branches, offers a wide and varied field for the student journalist. The Daily might well cultivate that field even more intensely and thus make the University better and maybe more favorably known. Likewise the various student organiza- tions, their history, aims and accomplishments might well furnish material for interesting and informative articles. There is an ever present danger that students may allow themselves to be so completely ab- sorbed in the work on the Daily as to neglect their college work with disastrous results. To obviate that danger the Board has endeavored so to arrange the work that there may be no reasonable excuse for failure to .maintain the proper scholastic standing. Of course, it is ex- pected that you work on the Daily seriously, honestly. Anyone unwilling to do that should in fairness to all concerned resign and seek a more congenial activity. The Board is not disposed to retain anyone who is dissatisfied or unwilling to cooperate in our joint enterprise. Before closing let me quote from an address given by Dr. William M. Lewis, president of Lafayette College, at the 29th anniversary con- vention of Pi Delta Epsilon, national honorary, collegiate journalist fraternity, meeting recently at Bethlehem, Pa.: "The undergraduate editor has more responsi- bility concerning the proper interpretation of the college to its clientele than does any other individual on the campus. He is the reporter of college policies, ideals and atmosphere not only. to alumni but to sister institutions where his publication goes in exchange, to parents and advertisers. "He can present facts fairly and according to the highest ethics of journalism, or he can dis- tort them to the end that they may have a sen- sational effect. "If, however, he is committed to a policy of what has been referred to as 'jazz journalism' or 'jitterbug journalism,' if he is more interested in trying to turn phrases and to ape columnists than in presenting truth interestingly and dram- atically, his experience will have no lasting value." Finally let me thank the members of the staff for havingcome here this evening-let me thank them too for the good work thus far done this year in making the Daily the fine publication that it is. Business Department I Bin Robbed Ir Business Manager Credit Manager - - . Advertising Manager Women's Business Manager Women's Service Manager Philip W. Buchen . Leonard P. Siegelman William 4. Newnan rHelen Jean Dean * . Marian A. baiter NIGHT EDITOR: MORTON L. LINDER The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Dail staff and represent the views of the writers only. Accommodation: To Be Continued?.. .. HE MOST INTERESTING aspect of the Tunisian question lies in the fact that for the first time the acual territory . of one of the great democratic nations is being threatened by the fascists. Previously, France and Britain have only been called upon to sacrifice fellow-members of the League of Na- tions, friendly neighbors or military allies. Now a valuable slice of French colonial territory is about to be sought, and if the Savoy question is actually reopened as has been hinted in the Italian demonstrations, a portion of the "sacred soil" itself will be demanded at the point of the bayonet. Corsica, a department of France since 1769, is almost as iuch an integral part of the nation in the popular mind as Savoy. Some observers have suggested the possibility that Italian threats to French national and colonial territory are designed merely as a diver- sion against German penetration to the east. If this is true, the ruse cannot go undiscovered for long, and certainly the most illogical Frenchman will perceive the relationship between a Ger- rhan threat to Poland and an Italian threat to France. Poland, if faced with the fate of Czecho- slovakia, will almost certainly welcome the assist- gnce of even so broken a reed as France has proven. But an even more important consequence than the driving together of France and P'oland would probably be the forcing of both into the arms of Soviet Russia. Unqestionably, the con- tmued aggressions of Germany and Italy cannot fail to bring about, sooner or later, some sort of cllaboration by the victim nations for the pur- pose of resistance. The big question is 'whether such collaboration will be able to stop the fascists short of general war. It hardly seems possible any longer that it will; but it also does not seem possible, or seems less possible than ever, that peace can be made with the fascist nations. M. Daladier finds himself in a tying positios, tut it is one for which he is largely responsible himself. No one any longer doubts that the policy of accommodation to fascism begun by the French and British governments five and a half years ago was a mistake, to say the least. But there is a great deal of difference of opinion to just when it became necessary to continue accommodation in order to prevent war break- ing out at any given time. Many people believe that it would have been Impossible for Daladier and Chamberlain to have rejected the Godesberg terms two months ago without immediately bringing war. Others think it would have been impossible to have defended Austria's independ- ence without sacrificing Ebropean peace. Still others think that opposition to the aggressions of Germany and Italy in Spain would have brought general war any time during the last two years. However, one thing must be recognized as certain. If France and Britain continue to act on the principle that any concession is better than war and that any rejection of a fascist demand will bring war, fascist dmination of Europe and of the world outside of America is certain. Of course it seems incredible that any such policy can be followed indefinitely by the two democratic nations, but after what has hap- pno sn far it is imnosibe# fn mk -qr , It is a deplorable fact that there are people who have no sense of comparative values. Their minds are incapable of comprehending the idea that different things have different values to different people. To illus- trate: If persons of this type are thieves, they veiw the. theft of five dollars from Henry Ford as one and the same thing with filching a like amount from a blind beggar. Their code of punishment is the Mosaic Law . . . an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, a hank of hair for a hank of hair, which is what I wanted to get around to. I have, unfortunately, a 'fraternity brother who adheres to such prin- ciples. One afternoon, in a moment of boyish exuberance, I unthink- ingly snatched from his back a few hairs, an act which caused him to howl in simulated pain and vow vengeance on me at the first op- portunity. I did not have long to wait. He caught me shirtless yester- day and snatched from my chest a small tuft of hair which I had lov- ingly cultivated from a few sprouts. Simply because I had pulled one or two insignificant tendrils of hair from his luxurious thatch, hairs which ae could not by any stretch of imagi- nation have missed, he, in one fell swoop, denuded my chest. As pun- ishment for stealing a mere maga- telle, he took my all. I had nurtured that little oasis of hair for ten years, combing it and rubbing it with my own special mix- ture of Lucky Tiger and Old Grand Dad rye. It had a gloss and sheen which anyone might have been proud of and gave promise of spreading over an estimated area of two square inches. Now it is gone, taken to ap- pease a wretch who has never since the age of eight wanted for hair on his chest. How much more in line with true justice would it have been, if he had destroyed one or two of my old columns. It might have been better if he had destroyed this one. My only consolation lies in Gargoyle's assurance that hairy torsos are now passe, gone with the handlebar moustache. Coon Coat There was a day, it is chronicled, when a raccoon coat was one of the essentials of a true college man.It was a luxurious badge of higher learning. A man could have a Phi Bete key, a football sweater, a pen- nant, and a sheepskin or a cap and gown. Without a coon coat, the rest were as nothing in the popular mind. There was no getting around it, a coon covering was the thing. For some reason or other they disap- peared from the back of the up-and- coming collegian and now they are a rarity to be classed with the dodo, the turtle neck sweater and "just off the boat stuff." It was something of a surprise to me, when I discovered that Bill Can- ton, proprietor of Canton-Degener's, has one in stock. It is a truly magni- ficent model, which Canton acquired from a last ditch customer who had given up the hope that the coon would ever make a come-back on the American campus. Bill has offered the animal for varying prices and so far has had no takers. He is down to what he feels is a new low price for a raccoon coat. Hanging there on its hook in lonely splendor, it reminded me of a bygone day, a golden day of pre-depression collegiana which will never return. I tried it on. Somehow it made me feel like somebody else. I took it off with the feeling of one stepping out of the past. -- -Be a Goodfellow Calendar TODAY Madrigal Singers, Yella Pessl di- rector. 11:30-12, WLW. Radio City Music Hall Symphony, Viola Philo &soprano, Erno Rapee conductor. Overture to The Secret of Suzanne (Wolf-Ferrari), two songs by Ravel, Scheherezade Suite (Rim- sky-Korsakov). 12-1, KDKA, WOWO. New YorkPhilharmonis Symphony, Eugene List pianist, John Barbirolli conductor. Piano Concerto NQ. 2 (Fu- leihan), Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony, Symphonic Variations (Franck), Prelude to Die Meister- singer (Wagner). 3-5, WJR. New Friends of Music, Kolisch String Quartet. Beethoveen Cycle, Op. 18, No. 4 in C minor, Op. 135 in F, Op. 59 No. 3 in C. 6-7, WJZ. Bach- CantataSeries, Alfred Wal- lenstein conductor. Cantata No. 186, "Arg're dich, O Seele-, nicht." 8-8:30, CKLW. Ford Sunday Evening Hour, Maria Reining soprano, Jose Iturbi conduc- tor. William Tell Overture ,(Rossini), Danse Macabre (Saint Saens), Ra- vel's Bolero, songs and arias .9-10. (Continued from Page 2) be a meeting of La Sociedad His- panica Tuesday, Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m., at the League. Mrs. Agueda R. H. de Vila wil Ispeak on "Los Argentinos y sus costumbres." Poems, games and music will also be included on the ,program. Members will please bring G their song books. The Graduate History Club will meet in the East Lecture Room 'of the Rackham Building Wednesday, Dec. 14, at 8 p.m. J. W. Stanton of the History Department will speak on "The Present Situation in the Far East." Discussion afterwards. All graduate history students welcome. Cercle Francais: There will be a meeting on Wednesday, Dec. 14 at 8 p.m. at the Michigan League. There will be a special program and re- freshments. Graduate Students: There will be an informal coffee hour and danc- ing Tuesday, Dec. 13, from 4 to 6 p.m. on the third floor of the Rackham Building for all graduate students. There will be a regular meeting of Senior Society Monday, Dec. 12, at 7:30 in the League. Polonia Circle will hold a meeting in Lane Hall Tuesday evening, Dec. 13, at 7 p.m. This will also partake of a Christmas reunion. All mem- bers and their friends are cordially nivited. The A.S.M.E. roast will be held Wednesday, Dec. 14 at 6:15 p.m. at the Union. There will be nomina- tiontspeechesrby the Spoonfuncup -ontestants for C.C. (craneo-capa- city) rating. Tickets may be purchased from Hugh Keeler, roastmaster, or repre-' sentative who can be found at the main M.E. bulletin board. Bibliophiles: Will holdtheir regu- lar meeting next Tuesday, Dec. 13,at 2:30 at the home of Miss Fredericka Gillette, 1319 South Forest.* The Music Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Tuesday, Dec. 13, at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. G. G. Brown, 1910 Hill St. Professor J. E. Maddy will speak. The music group of the Michigan Dames will be guests. The Interior Decoration Group of. the Faculty Women's Club will meet at 3 o'clock on Thursday afternoon, Dec. 15, at the Michigan League. Mr. Thomas S. Tanner, member of the College of Architecture and local architect, will lecture on "What Every Prospective Builder and Remodeler Should Know." Metropolitan Club will hold its next meeting, Monday, Dec. 12 at 7:30 p.m.' sharp at the Hillel Foundation. All members are expected to attend, Any member of Hillel, residing in a me- tropolitan district, is cordially invit- ed. Final plans will be made for the Christmas get-togethers, tentatively set at the Hotel Lincoln, Friday, Dec. 23 for New York students, and in a similar suitable place in Chicago. Hortense Tiger, president, is in charge of the get-together arrangements and TUESDAY Annual University Christmas Ora- torio, Mendelssohn's Elijah. Thelma Lewis sopranb, Hope Bauer Eddy; contralto, Arthur Hackett tenor, Har- din Van Deursen baritone, Coral Union, University Symphony, Earl V. Moore conductor. 8:30, Hill Audi- torium. WOR Symphony, Nadia Reisenberg pianist, Alfred Wallenstein conduc- tor. Fantasia Op. 15 (Schubert- Liszt), Rondo, Op. 53 (Schubert). 9:15-9:45, WOR. WEDNESDAY# Indianapolis Symphony, Fabian Sevitzky conductor. 3-4, WHIO, WJR, at 3:30. New England Conservatory Or- chestra, Wallace Goodrich conductor. Christmas music. 9-9:30 WOWO. THURSDAY Rochester Philharmonic, Jose Itur- bi conductor. 3:15-4, WXYZ. WOR Sinfonietta, Alfred Wallen- stein conductor. Four Old English Dances (Coates), Sinfonia in C ma- jor (Sammartini-Torrefranca), Pre- lude (Williams), Swabian Folksong (Fortner). SATURDAY New York Philharmonis Young People's Concert, Ernest Schelling conductor, Christmas music, 11-12, WJR. Metropolitan Opera Co. in Thomas' Mignon. Rise Stevens, Richard Crooks, Josephine Antoine, Ezia Pin- za, Wilfred Pelletier conductor. 3 p.m. WWJ. NBC Symphony Orchestra, Artur Rodzinski conductor. Three Chorales (Bach Respighi), Symphony No. 1 (Beethoven), Piano Quartet in C minor (Brahms) arranged by Schoen- !h(,r 1f1_11-mn TYA mXvV7 all members unable to attend are ex- pected to contact her immediately. ChurChes First Baptist Church, Sunday, 10:45 a.m. Dr. John Mason Wells of Hillsdale College will preach on the subject, "As You See It." Church school meets at 9:30. Roger Williams Guild, Sunday, 9:45 a.m., Students C 'ms at Guild Houe, Mr. Chapman presenting a survey of the later books of the O. T. 6:15 p.m. Rev. W. R. Shaw, pastor of Ypsilanti Baptist Church, will speak on "Our Guiding Star." Social and refreshments. First Congregational Church. Corn- er of State and William Streets. 10:45 a.m. The subject of Dr. Parr's sermon will be "The Tenth Man." Special Christmas music will be sung by the choir. 6 p.m. Student Fellowship Christ- mas Party for underprivileged bois. 8 p.m. Sigma Alpha Iota Candle- light Service in the Church Auditoli- um. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject, "God, The Preserver of Man." Golden Text: Psalms 40:11. Sunday School at 11:45. First Presbyterian Church, 1452 Washtenaw Avenue. 10:45 a.m., Morning Worsh