THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JUDY 13, 1930 THUM E __I_ DISUDY JL 3,13 Mi ~ir a anuug Published every morning except Mondry during the University Summer Session by, the Board in Control of Student Publications. T OASED ROLLS1 IFACKOWLEGING TOUR FRENDS AT TOM &ABROAD Well, this is getting us no where. We've no more Toast to Roll conse-. quently, we'll write our own books column, since Mr. R. E. M. was missing when last reported upon. About Books The Associated Press' is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all new dispatches credited to it or not otherwis credited in this paper and the local new p)ublished herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $1.50; by ma'l $2.00. ,Offices: Press Buildiner_ Mavnard tree Ain Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephoe 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GrURNEY WILLIAMS Editorial Director......... Howard F. Sho City Editor............ Harold Warren, J: Women's Editor............ Dorothy Mag Music and Drama E"ditor... William J. Gormi Books Editor......... Russell E. McCrack4 Sports Edtor................ Morris Targ ight Editors Denton Kunze Howard F. Sho' Powers Moulton Harold Warren, Jr Assistants Helen Carrm Cornelius Bueken; Bruce Manley Roberta Re Sher M. Quraishi BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE A. SPATER Assistant Business Managers William R. Worboys Harry S. Benjami Circulation Mager........Bernard Larsci Secretary.................. Ann W. Vene Asistants Joyce Davidson Dorothy Dunh Lelia M. Kidd Night Editor- Harold Warren, Jr. SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1930 "EXPERIMENT IN HUMANITIES Why did Otto Wood betray tbt solemn trust placed in him? Wh did he escape for tWe fourth tim in violation of his pledged word Where is the sociologist, or psy chiatrist, or criminologist who ca answer the question? Otto Wood, a convict imprisone for murder, made three escapes i rapid succession, but was recaptur ed' almost immediately after eac outbreak by the swift-moving ma: hunters of the law. To the priso authorities he was a problem, on of 'the incorrigibles; for such a these they have but one method increasing the punishment. Woo was incarcerated in the darkesi foulest dungeon of the Centra Prison at Raleigh, North Carolina There he remained for twenty-si months. Then a man of great huma sympathy and broad understand 'ing of the lives and hopes of hi fellow-men heard of Otto Wood and was moved to attempt what h called an "experiment in humani ties"; the governor of he grea state of North Carolina ordereda special dispensaion to be made and the prisoner was brought int the upper prison to be permitte the same privileges as the othe inmates of the institution. The governor asked him to pledge tha he would not try to escape again and the convict replied, "I'll neve run away as long as you are gov- ernor". As soon as the health broken by his solitary confinement had been restored, the "honor prisoner, who 4bd ;sW eady beer made an assistant in the canteen escaped for the fourth time. And the rest of the world, snug in its own security, turns to it text-books of psychology and so ciology, or seeks out the authori ties and the experts who profess to know the answers to such prob lems. Otto Wood, they say, is tainted with insanity, or Ott Wood is the victim of a complex se of circumstances which gave bhin no-ichoice but to be the man he is or Otto Wood was so nurtured b this :society into which he was bor that he was not taught the prin- ples of trust, honor, and sincerity which are the property of norma men. They have -given the same answers in a thousand other cases. We have appointed commissions to study law enforcement; we have bewailed through the mediums of the press and the radio the ten- dency of crime to increase; we have increased the measure of punish- ment with Baumes laws and others of like nature. Is it possible that we have bben taking the wrong atp- titude toward the combatting of lawlessness? A commission might well be appointed to promote the doctrine, not of law enforcement, but of crime prevention. v seThe Doctors Whoofie, vs Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor, Mich. n, Gentlemen: I suppose that since Hearts ha ia fair rputation as a journalist yo fellows feel the urge to place your ~selves in an impregnable positio by copying his most recent venture into the realm of stories. In othe words, we notice that as soon a he comes out with a reveval of the "Deadwood Dick" stories, you at tempt to copy his style and present ut a "Moran and Mack,, tale (Satur- ein day, July 12). Such nerve. If yo n insist on carrying us back a bit i en your story-teling why not presen uthe tale of the traveling salesma who stopped at the farmer's hous to spend the night or the one abou the newly married couple, who, i ~d seems, happened to be on a Pull- man- -1Or, if you can't find anything else to do why not arrange fora summer edition of the Inlander s that you can find something tc write about. Or come over anc spend a night with me; you'll fin in 'plenty to tell, since there's a leagu n house next door, filled to the brim er, with those typical summer school ap ish, giggling, pseudo-school ma' _ams. At any rate, don't do any mor -reviving. (signed) S. S. S. S. S V" (Somewhat Soused Summe. School Student) ieSuch impudence! Such down y right impertinence we have sel ,e dom seen in all our many years o t2 newspaper experience. We wer 7-at first/~ inclined to entirely disre gard such a preposerous communi 'n cation as the above which was evi dently written by some one .total :d ly unversed in the mere rudiment .n of punctuation or word phrasing However, we are human after al] we recall-we sing in the bath, w h pick our tooth (since the recen ,n wisdom-tooth consultation with a n high pressure dentist, we have had 1e all our teeth drawn except one- the diseased teeth were removed tc Ls prevent a general nervous break ldown, the sound teeth were remov 'd ed to prevent them from being pos- tsible centers of future decay, th dlone tooth was left as a mooring L. for our new plate). x. We are human, as we were say- ing, and so we cannot refrain from n explaining our position in this sor- -did, dirty business. 5In the first place, it may be o , interest to the redundant Mr. S. S e S. S. S. S:-we really have los -count- to know that the Rolls Col- aumn caters to a most discriminat- a' ing public, a public which does no '- listen to the Moran and Mack pro- p grams. Consequently the Rols d column does not feel itself unde r any obligations to vindicate its pol- e icies of retailing to its select clien- ttele certain of the better elements 1which compose the literary fare r for the more vulgar taste, and -which may have hus escaped the Lobservation of the Rolls Public , (Mercy, mercy, where did I put "my rubber gloves-EDITOR). a However, this will serve as a good ilesson never to laugh at any of the jokes the business staff of this pa- g per tells us. We had all the confi- s dence in the world in the Big Ex- -ecutive that told us that joke, and -we printed it without the slightest o compunctions. Not the slightest. - Not the (Now look here, you can't s get away with this trash all the o time-EDITOR). t LATEST BULLETIN ON THE NAME CHANGING CONTEST: The y Rolls Suggestion Receiving Depart- Sment spent a very quiet night last night-no contributions being re- ceived up to a very late hour in 1the early morning. (Pure piffie, ED- ITOR). *4*. s Here is is, ten minutes of five, with this column practically done fand then news comes that there is an extra column to fill! The Music and Drama editor has been suffer- ing from acute ptomaine poisoning and .is at present out of the ques- tion as a solution for filling the open spaces. Now where is this insistent books editor. Come on, R. E. M.., out of your hiding and into the column. Has anybody seen hide or scales of 'Mr. R. E. M.? OFFERED - One copy of Pills- bury's Elements of Psychology, un- revised edition, for the return of or information concerning the where-abouts of the Books editor of this paper. (What's the idea giving away a good book like that? Where's your sense of values?- EDTOR) YouVn'dl be nrnarised. edi- THAT CLEVER FOX, s NOAH WEBSTER u Webster's New International Di- -tionary of the English Language n 1929. Published by G. C. Merriam e Company, Springfield, Massachus- !r etts; Price-Enough all right, all ,s right. e Review Copy from The Michigan -' Daily Library. t Typewriter by Royal; paper by - Bond; Review set up and printed a by Ann Arbor Press, Maynard n Street. t You can't start about reading n this book in the usual way. The epublisher has gone and printed t' four pages of color plates illustrat- t ing: a) the official flags of the Uni- - ted States; b) Great Seals of the United States and Territories; c) g arms of various nations; d) arms a and flags of Great Britain and her o colonies; e) flags of various na- o tions, and lastly, f) yacht club d flags of the United States and d Canada. It is a darnable idea-as e 'full of holes as a seive, you know. ai It assumes that you are too dumb - to know what your country's flag -looks like, that it is necessary to start you off with a little color- e the plates are magnificently done in four colors, it will have to be (grudgingly) admitted. Though >who knows, these may be printed !r at the demands of our picture-lov- ing American reading public. "'"What is the good of a book -without pictures?" said Alice.' if Possibly it is the desire of the e book publishers to rob the poor -talking picture magnates of an op- -portunity of giving the public pic- - tures in color; it's hard to specu- -late. And much worse for you ,s when you do. Anyway the whole ;thing is a darnable idea; in fact, now that I think of it (if you never e use "i" in an article, you'll miss- .t pell a lot of words) this whole par- a agraph has been rather darnable d so far, and so has the whole darn- - able editorial been darnable. o The Internationl Dictionary was - published in 1890 and 1900. The -present edition was based on the - earlier, is now completely revised e in all departments including also 9 a department of new words on pages lxxxi-exx, examples such as - Agromyzidaexx, which Mr. Web- -. ster's followers have so quaintly -described as "a family of small or acalyptrate (which is not a new f word) two-winged flies; apple 1blotch, which they have as "Hot." tA disease of apple trees caused by -the parasitic fungus Phyllosticta -solitaria .... "; campfire-girl; gro- tceteria; lip stick, and so forth; and besides all these a dictionary of sgeography, of biography, and the r whole topped off with a reference - history of the World. The style of Mr. Webster and his sfollowers is slightly more turgid than that of the delightful Mr. 1Webster whose Sunday Supplement comic, "The Man in th Brown Der- by", has done so much to keep the tpews empty on hot Sabbaths. Thus you become slightly bewilder- Ied now and then as I did on page 2060 over the following criptic re- . mark, "Strobiliferous-a. Bearing or . producing strobiles." SIn the Dictionary Mr. Webster tdeals with a great many proper names and some that are not so tproper, I fear, among the former of which rank the Nipmucs (a tribe of Algonquin Indians), the Hupas, Walpurgis, and many oth- ers who crowd the overflowing pages in a continuous procession of ever-increasing awesomeness. tThe little Hupas are really delight- ful, but after you have said that, Lthere is really not much more to "say. The perpetual delightfulness on some pages give the effect that everything is "sweet and rosy", somewhat even to the Pollyana : effect, thus on page 590 you get in >rapid succession: delight n. delight v. t. delight v. i. delighted, delight- ful, delightfully, delightfulness, de- lighting, delightingly, delightsome, dlelightsomely, delightsomeness .. . Though in the next breath, by re- flex perhaps, you may find your- self murmuring: deliquesce, de- liquescence, deliquescent . However, as no critic will argue, there is nothing particularly orig- inal about Mr. Webster's style, though it does seem contributing, if somewhat verbose. But the Dictionary is not a bad book. It is merely one of those things that neither muss nor mar. Here this copy has been lying about the Daily for over a year, and as yet the cover is firm, the binding holds. and it makes a swell Dater What's Going OnI July 14-July 19 MONDAY 4:00 p. m.-Educational Confer- ence - THE PREPARATION OF HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS AT THE UNIVERSITY. Prof. Calvin 0. Davis. University High School auditorium. 15:00 p. m.-Lecture- EXPLOR- INC- THE UNIVERSE (Illustrated) 'Prof. W. Carl Rufus. 7:00 p. m.-Meeting-Men's Edu- cational club; third floor, Michigan Union. 7:15 p. m.-Women's Education club-THE NEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL UNIT. Dr. Willard C. Ol- son. (Joint meeting with Pi Lamb- da Theta). League building. i At the Theatres. Michigan: "So This Is London" 1with Will Rogers. Majestic: Do1uores Del Rio and Edmund Lowe in "The Bad One." Wuerth: "The Arizona Kid." TUESDAY 4:00 p. m.-Educational Qonfer- ence-CLASS SIZE AND PUPIL ACHIEVEMENT IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS. Prof. Earl: Hudelson. University High School auditorium. 5:00 p. m.-Lecture-THE GREY- HOUNDS OF THE ATLANTIC, PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE (Illustrated). Dean Herbert A. Sadler. 8:00 p. m. - Concert - MRS. MAUD OKKELBERG, Pianist, and MISS LOUISE CUYLER, Violinist, of the School of Music. Hill audi- torium. At the Theatres. Michigan : "So This Is London" Majestic : "The Bad One". Wuerth : Evelyn Brent in "Fram- ed". YQUR SUMMAER OPPORTUNITY Make This Summer Count More and more young people are deciding to take advantage of the summer vacation months by enrolling for a business course. Some do it as sort of a "finishing course" to their high school training. Others take up business training so they can help earn their way through the University beginning in the fall. Still others decide on business training as preparation for their life work and make a three months' start by beginning their training in sum- mer. Whatever your present plan may be, we believe you will want to know more about our Summer Term. Your name and address on the bottom of this advertisement will bring you full details. Tear it out and mall it in today. FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE COURSES [7s Shorthand Dictaphone Bookkeeping Calcu~latop' Typewriting Secretaria, Training HAMILTO'"N - BUSINESS COIEGE State & William Sts. I , dr s .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .... ALOVE TEMPEST YOU'LL NEVER BE ABLE TO FORGET""rr The Stars of "What Price Glory" Dolores. ci Rio* and EDMUND LOWE IN 'T h e a d ~All e~ad~ne alking She Was a Flirt--He Had a Girl in Every Port! Wait Till You See What Happens ' WEDNESDAY 1:00 p. m. - Excursion No. 3 - General Motors Proving Ground. Start in front of Angell hall. Round trip direct to proving ground and return by auto but. Reserva- tions in Room 9, University hall., Tickets $1.00. Trip ends at 5:45 p.m. 4:00 p. m.-Educational confer- ence-ANALYSIS OF REPORTS FFROM ACCREDITED HIGH'+ SCHOOLS IN MICHIGAN. Prof. George E. Carrothers. 5:00 p. m.-Lecture-SOME EX- PERIENCES IN C 0 N N ECTION WITH THE TALKING PICTURES (Illustrated) . Prof. Ray K. Immel, of the University of Southern Cali- fona At the Theatres. 8:15 p. m. Lydia Mendelssohn : Martin Flavin's THE CRIMINAL CODE, by the Michigan Repertory Players. Michigan: "Paramount on Pa- rade". Maj esic : "The Man and the Mo- ment," with Billie Dove. Wuerth: "Framed". THURSDAY 1: 00-Lecture-THE PROGRESS- IVE EDUCATION MOVEMENT. J.' M. Dorey, Executive secretary, Pro- gressive Education a s sociation. University High School auditor- ium, 4:00 p. m.-Mathematical club- Papers (a) POHLKE'S THEOREM I AND AN APPLICATION, by Prof. J. W. Bradshaw; (b) PERIODIC, ORBITS, by Prof. L. A. Hopkins. Room 3011 Angell hall. At the Theatres. 5:00 p. m.-Reading-NABOTH'S i VINEYARD, by Clemence Dane. Prof. Chester M. Wallace, of the Carnegie Institute of Technilogy.E Lydia Mendelssohn. Michigan: "Paramount on, Pa- rade". Majestic: "The Man and the Mo- ment". Wuerth: "Framed". FRIDAY 3:00 p. m.-Excursion No. 4-Ni- agara Falls and vicinity, under the direction of Prof. William H. Hobbs. Via special motor busses to Detroit and steamer to Buffalo. Reserva-I ~tions in Room 9, University hall. At the Theatres . Lydia Mendelssohn: "The Crimi- nal Code," by the Michigan Re- pertory Players. Michigan: "Paramount on Pa- rade." Majestic: "Movietone Follies of 1930." Wuerth : Al Jolson in "Mammy."~ SATURDAYI At the Theatres. Lydia Mendelssohn : "The Crimi- nal Code." Michigan: "Pal amount on Pa-, rade."1 Majestic : "Movietone Folliles of 1930." NOW PLAYING AT THE COOL 4 l International Fun I *1 If the writer who signed his name, "A 'Detroiter Who Voted for Bowles," will inform the editor of his name, his letter will be pub- ished under the head of Campus Opinion. It is against the policy of -Now Showing at the MICHIGAN I