THE MICHIGAN DAll:V SATURDAY; -JULY 27.1425 T~lEMTCTTE~N DATY ATTIDAY..TTTV ~ 1, '&a. adXVAJF } aL j v llil d. Ai 1 / 1{70 r mnn - ~ a--- -. - - - - - -- - - the pages of their newspapers are no more. They are gone, and only the pleasant memory of men %ho expressed opinions freely and fearlessly re- mains. Conformity rules, and the great majority of us bow humbly before it. Were we speaking of f-eedom? Americans had better do a little self- analyzing and stand for what they really are, before they talk of exercising other freedoms. After all, without freedom of personality the other liberties we cherish would soon cease to exist. AROUND eTHDE TOWN... Good morning! . . . yesterday our wanderings about the town brought us over to the -Physics building . . . we were after a story about the con- struction of the new "cyclotron" . .. which . .. in case you don't know is the atom-splitting machine that will manufacture "synthetic radium" . after having the apparatus explained to us for over two hours . . . we still admit . . . that we don't know what it is all about . . . HOWEVER . . . after receiving a package from the local post- office yesterday we had developed a theory all of our own . . . in the interest of science we pass it on . . . all one has to do is drop an atom in a box ... mark it "fragile" . .. and mail ... that atom will be split . . . and at least six ways! * * * * Did you hear the screeching siren of the police- sauad car late yesterday afternoon and wonder what it was? ... so did we ... and so we followed it was worth a summer tuition to see them careen about the corners . . . and watch everything melt before them like butter . . . and the gallant manner in which they came screeching to a stop in front of St. Joseph's Hospital was a joy ... and then when they breathlessly (yes, breathlessly as they're all pretty stout) .. . rushed a woman into the emergency door we thought we were on the trail of a real story .. .our hopes skyrocketed when we noted that she was registered as a poisoning case . . . it was a Mrs. Emily Bodeving, 58, of De- troit ... our hopes kept going ... up ... up ... and then bingo! . . . the white-clad doctor came out . . . and said . . "Nothing serious, boys - she just ate a cheese sandwich, spoiled by the heat." . . . We're looking forward to the thrill of a life-time when we watch the squad car take a REAL case to the hospital! * * * * We sat in circuit court yesterday while Judge George W. Sample sentenced William Lowe, 28 .. . to 72 to 10 years in Ionia prison ... and John Nad- ack, 19, . .. 1 to 5 years . . . they deserved it ... BUT involved in the case are two 15-year old girls . now being held in the local jail ... they're little kids ... bewildered ... scared ... and wondering what it's all about . . . it's funny but we see some case like it every day ... its developed a philosophy in us . .. which we pass on ... living's a funny game --you gotta see a lot that ain't an' shut cut a lot that is to keep laughin' an' lovin'. And before we leave you . . . here's a story that comes out of Angell Hall .. . and deals with one of the professors ... coming into his class yesterday morning, he announced ... "I refuse to begin my lecture until this room settles down" . . . and did we smile when one of the sympathetic school ma- ams ... in the back of the room . . loudly whispered . . . "he better go home and try a tomato juice cocktail." 1"1 1 supreme court sees the overthrow on constitutional grounds of other administration measures, could he still leave it unused, or would Congress take back the discretionary power of currency inflation conferred upon him? That thought might give pause to the anti-New Dealers as they contemplate the possibilities that lie beyond supreme court ac- tion on so many major constitutional questions next term. It could become a case of "out of the constitutional frying pan and into the inflation fire" for the conservatives. The SOAP BOX Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editor reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Reflections Of A Bon Vivant To the Editor: Suum cuique, Indignant - suum cuique! I do congratulate you! The front pages of our newspapers are full of such burning issues as the threatening war in Ethiopia, the persecution of religious minority group~s in Hitler-Germany, the strike in Terre Haute. Besides worrying about them, (I hope you do) - good Indignant, you do find time to worry in addition about such minor issues as front-page advertisements of beer gar- dens. Thank you, for calling my attention to it, because I had not even noticed it. However I am most indignant, hearing you refer to alcoholic drinks as "foul liquid." Have you ever tried a glass of genuine Pilsner? Have you ever experienced the joys of the Munich "Bock- bierfest" the Vienna "Heurigen?" Ah, there - I knew it! And how about the queen of drinks "Veuve Cliquot" that sparkling, bubbling French champagne; and how about the minor "liquid" stars, Assmannshauser, Liebfrauenmilch, Mosel- wein, etc.? What? You never heard about them? You do not know what you are missing. Please do try 1911 vintage - that was a very famous year for wine. Oh, how I miss it. Cheer up and do not worry about the younger generation who are well able to take care of them- selves and who also know the charm of an aperitif (that's what the French call drinks. And you know 50 million Frenchmen can't be wrong). Besides, notorious beer drinking pre-Hitler Ger- many produced, in spite of the "foul liquid" (may- Le because of it -you never can tell), a Goethe, a Schiller, a Beethoven, a Lessing, an Einstein (with emphasis on stein) - and none of them were exactly abolitionists. In closing, let me cite the last verse of that fa- mous German student song "Gaudeamus igitur": Pereat tristitia, Perant osores, Perat diabolus 1 quivis antiburschius, atque irrisores! vwhich means-as you probably know, in plain American: "Down with the bles," the grumblers, the devils and with all narrow-minded pedants and sneerers." Here is how and "prosit"! -Amused, and sorry for you! Disdain For 'Indignant' To the Editor: As I read the article written by the contributor who signs himself "Indignant," a feeling of disdain arose in me. These lamentations apparently are not based upon the moral aspect of alluding to alcoholic drink in advertisements, as is inferred in the first part of the item: obviously it is a shallow pretext for the voicing of the personal grievances of an ardent prohibitionist. May I point out that reput- able and respectable magazine publications such as Scribners, Time, Forum, American Mercury, and American carry advertisements for whiskeys, gins, Cognacs, wines, mixers, and cocktail bars! Such an innocent advertisement as is referred to in the article could not be construed by most in- telligent persons to be inappropriate or conducive in any way to the moral breakdown of youth. Perhaps the younger generation of today is not as deluded in this matter of the consumption of intoxicating drinks as are those "drys" of the older generation who cannot conceive of such a quality as temperance and who turn a deaf ear at mention of the word. The regret expressed by this contributor seems no less than ludicrous. -Dr. B.B.C. Kikwood Golf C1 fief . , or Purse Complaii Peeves B ri t 1. FOR SALE ---- CLASSIFIED FOR SALE: Hartmann wardrobe Eni 'is Writir 'lys o r ADVERTISING trunk. Brown; excellent condition; reasonable. Call 2-2700. 45 Aniurican laycr For ce advertisements with Clasified FOR SALE: Antique jewelry, brace- D erogatory Remarks The classified columns close at five lets, brooches, earrings, etc. Rea- o'clock previous to day ofrinsertion, sonable. Phone 8050. 2020 Dev- Box numbers may be secured-at no LONDON, July 26. --- (Al)- Joe Extra charge. onshire Road. 5x ash in advance lie per reading line - Kirkwood, it appears, was in ignor- (on basis of five average words to ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBA - ance of one of England's most cher- line) for one or two insertions.-(FENCH ARTIST) SCENE 10c per reading line for three or N-FEC RIT CN ished sports traditions when recent- more insertions. LUXEMBURG GARDENS - $10 ly he expressed dissatisfaction with Minimum 3 lines per insertion. LRAM U GRDES - $1- the izeof oveTelephone rate - 5c per reading line FRAMED. U L R I C HS BOOL the size of money prizes in the British for one or two insertions. STORE, CORNER EAST AND open. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. SOUTH UNIVERSITY. The trick shot artist from Kan- 0'" discount if paid within ten days garooland brewed a-healthy storm by from the date of last insertion.- AUNDWY Minimum three lines per insertion.A D suggesting that American stars would By contract, per line -2 lnes daily, on L1 continue to remain at home in large 4lInes EO,.. 2 ontls.........3c Careful work at low price. ix numbers unless the Royal and Ancient 2lines daly, college year........70 _ relaed n. he urs sting an mae -4 lines -E.O.D., college year.......7c relaxed on the purse strings and made 00 lines use as desired... 9c. . PERSONAL laundry service. We take the open worth their while. 300 lines used as desired......e individual interest in the laundry .000 lines used as desired....7, After Henry Cotton and several 2.000 lines used as desired......,.6c problems of our customers. Girls' other British stars had replied with 're above rates are per reaaing line, silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- based on eight reading lies ,per inch., pointed cracks at Kirkwood, suggest- [unictyvpe, upper and lower case. Add anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. ing he was just a little upset after rc per line to above rates for all capital Call for and deliver Phne 5594. letters. Add 6c per line to above for- $1E.Hoe.3 having torn up his card in the first bold face, upper and lower case. Add a11 E. Hoover. 3X round at Muirfield, one of London's ioc per line to above rates for bold face - --- favoritegoicapital letters. STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- golfing writers applied the The above rates are for 7 5 oint sonable. Free delivery. Phone 300. finishing touches. Said he: type. 4 "It should be stressed that Kirk- wood is not speaking for his brother FOR RENT professionals. When Sarazen scored FOUR ROOM furnished apartment two summers ago he declared that the one Aug. 1, one Sept 15, Kelvinators, TRYON, S. C., July 26 - P)- title was worth $100,000 as a com- laundry. 209 N. Ingalls St. Phone Tryon has no police radio system, but mercial asset. 3404. it..has the -nextgestthing. Through "So Kirkwood thinks that prize 3-.-- an arrangement with the telephone values ought to be increased here. He The first road through the rough company, the operator will press a says it is ridiculous that men who country now included in the Smoky button, making the bigtown bell toll attract the crowds should get such u ynw cudd kwa oy utn, kngt b tw e attrrathrowsshudse.sc Mountains national park was built once when a policeman is needed. poor rewards. dy Col. W. H. Thomas to haul Con- Hearing the bell, the policeman on "That is where the English and federate cannons during the war be- duty will go to the nearest phone and American views of sport are at vari- tween the states. ask the operator who needs help. ance. It is the English tradition that the game is greater than the reward, and while it may seem a curious one to other nations it suits us." Hotels 'Belong' To City, Tulsa Mayor Discovers M I C H G. A N TULSA, Okla., July 26. --- (/P) -All R E P E R T O R Y hotels in Tulsa really belong to the city as a result of accumulations of P L A Y E R S fines for failure to comply with aging p r e s e n t ordinances, Mayor T. A. Penney as- serts. - The ordinances require every hotel employe, bell boy, chamber maid, clerk, porter, and so on, to obtain a hotel worker's license before he is employable. The fine is $20 a day for each em- ploye during the time he continues to -' work without the license. An exam- ination of records disclosed it has been 15 years since such a license was is- Single Admission: 75c, 50c, 35c sued. Phone 6300 The Giants occupied first place in LYDIA MEN DELSSOH N TEATRE the National league 86 consecutive days this season before the Cards momentarily pushed them out. They , . were ahead 112 days last year before the same thing happened to them.- ENDS TONIGHT "AIR HAWKS" - plus - "COWBOY MILLIONAIRE" --- Sunday, Monday, Tuesday JAMES CAGNEY "G-MEN" plus - PATRICIA ELLIS "A NIGHT AT THE RITZ" .5MATINEES' 25c Balcony Evenings IFO R 35c Main Floor Evenings TWO FEATURES Kay Frances George Brent in "STRANDED" For a limi ted time lots on Portage Lalke and9 Arline Judge Kent Taylor in ,, Shores and Woodlawn Beach subdivi- "College Scandal" Coming Sunday sions at Portage Lake will be offered at GRACE MORE sacrifice prices. Located only 15 miles "Love Me Foarev er" north and west of Ann Arbor, these two A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON - The verbal turmoil over con- stitutionality of the New Deal, set off by the NRA decision, served to obscure a major political topic that theretofore had been batted about by every Washington tongue. What has become of the currency inflation bogey? Not since the pay- the-bonus battle so narrowly won by the sus- taining of a presidential veto in the Senate, has anything been heard about that. The question is suggested by excerpts from the report of a bar association committee at Los Angeles. It had to do with commercial and bank- ruptcy law changes. It foresees a "political crisis" not long to be deferred because of the "inevitable conclusion" that a "scaling down of debt super- structures" without currency inflation must be the foundation of any successful recovery program. ANOTHER INFLATION DRIVE? J N PAST financial emergencies, the report said, Congress had permitted "universal collisions be- tween debtors and creditors, followed by panic, acute distress and later reconstruction" as pioneer spirits turned "from their bankruptcies" to build "a new economy, bigger than the old" from "un- garnered pools of natural resources." The present policy of government, it was held, was to avoid coming to grips "with the excess debt" problem by moving "the crisis point" along by mor- atoria and debtor-creditor conciliation measures of an expedient nature "to the indefinite future.' "If the inherent recuperative powers of the country, which have not failed in the past, should bring about recovery, these policies will be vin- dicated," the committee found. But if not, what? The lawyers of the committee foresaw a constitutional amendment battle to free present trends "toward collectivism in the man- agement of wealth, debtor and creditor relations and dependency" from constitutional restraints. Might there not intervene another currency in- flation drive in Congress A' WEAPON STILL UNUSED We Want Movie Reviews Only To the Editor:j "Black Fury" is admittedly a good motion pic- ture; whether it deserves four stars is but a mat- ter of conjecture and it is not my wish to dispute R.A.C.'s right to give it this rating. What does irk me, however, is that R.A.C. does declare the pic- ture superb and then relegates to one scant par- agraph the explanation for its magnificence. In- stead of a logical interpretation of this picture's merit we find instead that R.A.C. has attempted to wreak his vengeance on the capitalist-infested movie industiy with an ardent plea that all movie- goers be certain to recognize the misrepresentations against Communism. What any reader of a mo- tion picture column desires is not a pseudo-political harangue but a sensible valuation of the picture in question. -J.J.L. London's county council asks an appropriation to advertise London to the world. Some of these out-of-the-way places are veritable bonanzas if tourists are merely told. -The Detroit News. It is orneaedth at i -r , mmaimpr c ~ a nn .? MAJESTIC 5c MATINEE TODAY 252 Util 2P.M. Sunday S H E S I N G;S! SHE DANCES! SHE BRIGHTENS EVERY HEART WITH HER LAUGHTER! Her Happiest X: Picture- , ,' r , : " r subdivisions offer convenience and economy in summer residence. Well graded, well wooded, and provided with fie sand beaches on an exceljtent lake. Prices range from $450.00. For addi- tional information-write or call R. Read, 4i" y .. N 11 11 11