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June 28, 1935 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1935-06-28

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THE, MICHIGAN DAILY

E MICHIGAN DAILY
Publication of the Summer Session

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Publisaed every morning except Monday during the
University year and Summer Session by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association
and the Big Ten News Service.
MEMBER
4 aat&4 *Utiate 'rvs
-934 ffUniakj1QePz 935
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 paper and the local news
published herein. All rights of republication of special
dispatches are reserved.
Ed thered at the PostOffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as
second classtmatter.tSpecial rate of postage granted by
Third Assistant° Postmaster-General.
Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail,
$1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mai,
$4.50.
Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street,
Ann Arbor, M~ichigan. Phone: 2-1214.
Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. it
West 4nd Street, New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, Ill.
EDITORIAL STAFF.
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR........JOHN C. REALEY
ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR . .ROBERT S. RJWITCH
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas H.
Kleene, William Reed, Guy M. Whipple, Jr.
ASSISTANT EDITORS: Robert Cummins, Joseph Mattes,
Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Rueger.
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 2-1214
BU INES MANAGER................RUSSELL READ
ASS TANT BUS. MGR..........BERNARDf ROSENTHAL
Circulation Manager'..................Clinton B. Conger
BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Charles L. Brush, Frederick E.

an endless broadcast, day after day, from the halls
of Congress, both because it would lose dramatic in-
terest for the public and because it would deprive
our private broadcasting stations of commercial
accounts. On occasion, however, we believe that
baseball games and hill billies, Jumbly Breakfast
Food and Little Pink Pills could and should stand
aside in order that the Congress might do its part
in the painless education of our citizenry.
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, beregarded
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.
Anent the Nazi Dictatorship
To the Editor:
Here is an interesting bit of news reported by an
Englishman who recently visited Germany. The
report tells once more what a brutal and degrading
tyranny the German people are made to suffer
under Hitlerism. "Everyone in the fatherland,"
writes the gentleman, "is subject to a system of
espionage framed largely upon the Russian model.
Every ten houses or so are grouped in a 'cell' for
which a Leiter' or leader is appointed. It is his
duty to know all that goes on in each house, and
if he sees anything suspicious to report it to the
'Leiter' of the larger unit, the 'block,' and if mat-
ters are seriously political the news reaches the
higher unit, which is the 'Gau,' and the 'Gauleiter'
is usually one of the secret police. When things
reach this stage the offender is apt to disappear,
and it is risky to ask questions."
The above is from The Manchester Guardian,
Friday, June 14, 1935, Page 18.
-M. Levi, Professor-Emeritus.
Four stars - mustn't miss; three stars -verygood;
tostars- an average picture; one star - poor; no
star-=don't go.
AT THE MICHIGAN'
Double Feature
A4 4 "THE SCOUNDREL"

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As Others See It Classified Dir
The Alaskan Dr°amaCLASSIFIED STUDENT
INEFFICIENCY is about to ruin the United States ADVER TSNC "evenings
colony in Alaska. Officials admit they under- -D-R.IIN. factory.'
estimated the task of settling the two hundred fam- u advertisements with Classified GIRL stud
lies of United States farmers in the Alaskan Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214.
valley set aside for them. The classified columns close at five home e
oclock previous to cay of insertion. Phone 5:
Director Don Irwin, who has stuck to the col- Box numbers may be secured at no
onists, is finding it difficult to get anything done. extia charge. WANTED:
Cain advance lic per reading line
The main reason for this seems to be due to errors (on basis of five average words to meals a
line) for one or two insertions. Olivia.P
n shipping. Director Irwin telegraphs to Seattle 10c per reading line for three or
more insertions.
for tools and supplies most urgently needed - and Minimum 3 lines per insertion. WANTED:
that is the last he hears of it. Telephone rate- 15c per reading line work re
Horses have been in the Alaskan colony for a 14c per reading line for three or 204 Mic
month and yet wagons have never been shipped. 10,,,more insertions. a.m.
10,,,discount if paid within ten days
Tools such as levels, saws, planes, axes, are badly from the date of last insertion.
needed for the building of homes. In place of these, By conimumtract, ethe nes per Insertion.
cnrtper line - 2 lines daily, one
equipment for the cannery-still on the blue- month. ...................F..URc
4 lines EOD., 2 months ....3c FURNISH]
print-radiators for the school to be built next 2 ines daily, college year........7c vate ba
ceet4 lines P.O.D., college year .. ....r
fall, cement that cannot be used for weeks, are 10 lines us desirrooms w
shipped in. "Shipping in reverse," says Director 300 Ines used as desired..........Sc water.G
1 nn lnesused as dlesred ........7e
Irwin. 2,000 lines used as desired.....ftc Washing
The colonists themselves are becoming appre- 'inc above rates are perreding line,
based on eight reading lines per inch
hensive and dissatisfied. It is reported that four ionic Lype, upper and lower case. Add LARGE Co
families have expressed the desire to return home ec per line to above rates for all capital fortable,
letters. Add 6c per line to above for
and that at least thirty more would subscribe to bold face, upper andrlower case. Add pus. Re
10c per line to above rates for bold face ton.
the same plan. Added to this dissatisfaction is the Capital letters.
strife recurring between individuals in the various e above rates are for 7 point SINGLE a
camps. Camp 6 has just had a feud. One faction for men
wants to haul logs first and build a sawmill after- LAUNDRY Schoolc
ward and the other wants the sawmill first. As a --- -----"--- Dial 385
result, the factions will not work with each other. PERSONAL laundry service. We take
Yet to be done is construct a community center, individual interest in the laundry FURNISH
erect homes for all colonists (one cottage has been problems of our customers. Girls' vate b
started), etect shelters for livestock, provide water silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- rooms w
supply, clear twelve acres of land for each colonist, anteed. Men's shirts our spwcialty water.
build thirty-odd miles of new roads in the valley, Cal for and deliver. Phone 5594.Washin
prepare and harvest the community garden and 611 E. Hoover. 3x WELL FU
field crops. airy fro
Roads are vital to the colony. The only con- STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- 6754, 71
necting link with the rest of Alaska is the inade- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006.
quate railroad now striving to deliver the freight. 4 ROOM R
Supplies that cannot stand weather have had to be -..about y,
dumped out in the open where a rain will ruin LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. 509 Tho
thousands of dollars worth of supplies. Careful work at low price. lx ATTRAC
-The Columbia Missourian.-Pral
-Th________________ s r STUDENT and family laundry. Good fortable
Beauty And Brains rain water. Will call for and de- 2-2203.
liver. Telephone 4863. 2x
A T THIS SEASON, the newspapers of America ---_- --
are filled with photographs of honor grad- LOSTAND FOUND M
uates. Now, despite all the talk of equality be- LOST: Black and gold earring. 2 /2
tween the sexes, a feminine likeness is more prized inches long. Heirloom. In or near 5
than is that of her male counterpart in scholarship, Michigan Theater. Reward. Phone 35
wherefore the majority of these pictures are of 6352. 20
girls. Casual as well as academic students of such ---T -
matters must have noted the rising tide of pulch- -Tr;
ritude in these pictures, following an increasing
trend of recent years and tending to prove that
beauty and brains may be found together in col- Today - Saturday
leges as well as in a world of practical affairs. FRED McMURRAY
Gone and unregretted is the day when a female DOUBLE FEATURE
valedictorian was avoided by the other sex and A"
more pitied than censured by her own, while the blus
expression "beautiful but dumb" is as obsolete as A Plus -_U _T
the bathing skirt. . .A EIATUARE
Respective parts played in this scheme by na- "MAYBE IT'S LOVE"
ture and the beauty parlor may be subject to in- Prices WA
quiry, but the adept at higher algebra and irreg- 15 until 6 P.M.
ular declensions presumably are able to handle per- 25c After 6 "Unnd
sonal equations with similar skill. The professor's _
daughter, we infer, no longer is a wise pariah, nor
is it uncommon to dangle scholastic honors as
well as male scalps. Even Helen of Troy mightti
have admitted intelligence had she lived in our
own era.

WANTED
to stay afternoons and'
as desired. Room if satis-
Telephone 3598. 22
ent for services in faculty
echange for room rent.
59. 21
Two more persons for
t the French table. 1120
Phone 7796. 16
Two college students for
mainder of summer. Apply
Ligan Theater Bldg. 8-10
17
FOR RENT
ED APARTMENT with pri-
th and shower. Double
with hot and cold running
Garage. Dial 8544.. 422 E.
;ton. 13
rner room. Pleasant, com-
quiet, convenient to cam-
asonable. 333 E. Washing-
19
nd double rooms and suites
s 825 E. University. Near
of Education. Reasonable.
1. 12,
ED APARTMENT with pri-
ath and shower Double
with hot and cold running
Garage. Dial 8544. 422 ,E.
gton. 13
RNISHED SUITE and large
nt room. Reasonable. Dial
7 Arbor St. 14

ectory

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SEEK SUBSTITUTE FEED
BALLINGER, Tex., June 26 -
- Experiments being conducted
Texas A. & M. College with a yel
seeded variety of sorghum - a ci
between milo and kafir - are
tended to develop a substitute
milo maize as principal feed cror
west Texas. The tests were stai
after serious damage to milo mi
was threatened by a bacterial dise
TRAFFIC SURVEY COSTLY
DENVER June 26 -(")- '
city of Denver recently obtained
most costly book. It is a report
traffic conditions and cost $183,68
to complete. Nearly all of the
penditure was paid as salaries to
lief workers who conducted the :
vey. The volume is four inches tlY
Kansas, which nas averaged 1
000,000 bushels of wheat for the
five years, also plants more r
than 42 other states.
MAJESTIC
Ends Today
MARLENE DIETRICE

"The Devil Is a Woman"
Selected Short Subjects
Tomorrow
A Dramatic Sensation!
"OIL FOR THE LAMPS
OF CHINA"
with PAT O'BRIEN and
JEAN HUTCHINSON
Matinees 2:00 - 3:30
All Seats 25c
Nights 25c and 35c

11

In Defsen.se
Of Athlietic.

T HAS BEEN EASY during recent
years to find much fault with inter-
collegiate athletics for their commercialization
and overemphasis, It is equally easy to take them
to task for restricting sports competition to a very
few students out of the whole number.
All of these criticisms have a basis of truth.
They have been well looked into by such groups
as the Carnegie Foundation. They are worthy of
due consideration because the institution of inter-
collegiate sport is worth saving. And fortunately,
most people vaguely believe it to be worth saving;
although they would find it dffcult to justify
their feeling on other than sentimental grounds.
The sentimental basis itself can be shown to be
a strong one. In any large university the size of
our great state institutions and the larger private
schools, there is distinct need for some such unify.-
ing influence as athletics provides.
The University of Michigan, a community of 9,-
000 transients, is in many respects no community
at all. It is many hundreds of communities, each
delineated by special interests in work and play.
The fraternity man on Washtenaw Avenue may
have little idea how the independent in an attic
bedroom lives; their existences are, in fact, very
di erent. The medic and the engineer frequent
distinct parts of the campus, and go their own
ways without-fmeeting or exchanging notes. Even
students joined by common classes and activities
are usually strangers in all that matters. Lectures
and -concerts and plays afford something of a
meeting ground, but again the interest is more or
less specialized.
Only at athletic events does all Michigan gather
and cheer in a common cause that represents
Michigan. Only at football games, probably, is
anything like a real cross-seqtion of Michigan to be
found. Only in the stands do followers of botany
and dentistry and sociology recognize their interest
and loyalty toward the University - the whole Uni-
versity as a single institution standing up to other
institutions of its kind.
Allowing one's feelings to be wrought in the
heat of bitter athletic competition may produce
the same narrow kind of Babbitry that has made
odious nationalism possible. Nevertheless, the
much greater danger today is that loyalty to in-
stitution will be completely forgotten or sub-
merged in lesser loyalties. And intercollegiate ath-
letics is the only major contemporary force in
University life making for an emphasis of the whole
rather than the parts.
Radio For
C gress...
T IS HIGH TIME that sessions of
Congress were given the publicity
f radio broadcasts. The use of the air waves to
amiliarize the public with other branches of gov-
ernment has proved both feasible and decidedly
beneficial.
No little part of the growth of executive prestige
in our Federal government can be traced directly
to the increased use of radio in recent yers for
th transmission of campaign speeches, inaugurals,
pujblic addresses, "fireside talks," and finally a veto
message. The public has come to feel that it knows
an~d can trust the President where it is suspicious of
the workings of many other agents.
to take a subject near at hand, one can cite
the course of the bonus. A nation listened with in-
tense interest to the first veto ever delivered in
person and broadcast over the country; then the
nattion knew that the Patman Bill was going back
to the two houses of Congress -into what, con-
pa atvely speaking, amounts to Stygian dark-
ness. Many listeners no doubt wished they might
have heard the reaction to President Roosevelt's
speech otherwise than by means of the cold and
disjointed newspaper accounts hours later.
r4A, .-- +a. A +,Q s. i.i nl nr+. n~

A Hecht - MacArthur production released
through Paramount, starring Noel Coward, with
Julie HydonMartha Sleeper, Hope Williams, and
Alexander Woolcott. Also a newsreel.
The intelligence, delicacy, and sheer skill of Ben
Hecht and Charles MacArthur, with the assistance
of Noel Coward, bring, in "The Scoundrel" a pic-
ture that shames Hollywood quite as much as did
"Crime Without Passion," their first production.
Certainly, there will be few better pictures this
year, and if there are, they will more than likely
be the work of these two.
The performances of all are impeccable, with the
work of Coward and Miss Haydon outstanding, but
perhaps only because they handle the more promi-
nent roles. The beautiful Miss Haydon, a cine-
matic newcomer, is effortless in a wonderful per-
formance.
The dialogue throughout the picture is excitingly
brilliant. Unfortunately, because of the English
accent of many in the cast or perhaps because of
faulty recording, much of it is difficult to hear.
"The Scoundrel' is the story of a publisher,
charming, but cruelly heartless when his love for
a woman dies. He is hated by all but the women
who humiliate themselves through love for him,
and even they despise him when the pain of sep-
aration has left.
A young and idealistic poetess falls in love with
him, and he with her, for a time.. Then she is
discarded as were the rest.
When death unexpectedly comes for him, he re-
turns to earth, searching for the tears of even one
who mourned his death. The story is powerfully
simple.
You shouldn't miss "The Scoundrel."
It is difficult to understand why this picture
is shown at the end-of-the-week run, and even
more difficult to understand why it is with "Under
the Pampas Moon" on a double feature bill.
Shots of Jesse Owens are the best in the news
reel.-.A.C.
UNDER THE PAMPAS MOON
A Warner picture starring Warner Baxter and
Ketti Galian.,
Why anyone should want to see Warner Baxter
in a kinky, itchy-looking wig saying "teenk" instead
of "think" (as Latin Americans are supposed to do,
I presume) is beyond me, especially as there are
many, many more such atrocities committed in
this, the year's worst picture.
-X.A.C.

ENT free to student for work
yard and garden. Swezey,
mpson. 2-2340. 18
TIVE 2-room suite. Com-
beds. Cross ventilation.
impus. 327 E. William. Dial
$6 per week. 15
ICH IGAN,
Matinees and
C Balcony Evenings
o Main Flcor Nights
Now
iily Grand Show!!!
~~-
- -oO Also
RNER BAXTER
r the Parmpas Moon
r... R lease ~~~ -'t~r

Pilgrim Shop
SUMMER FOOC
-Salads-
Tuna Fish.......25
Devilled Egg.....20
I Fruit Salad 25
Head Lettuce ... .20
Combination . .. 20
Potato ... . . ...15
Tomato .........15
S - Sandwiches -
. Bacon & Tomato..25
Tomato.........15
~ Bacon...........15
Devilled Egg ..... 15
Olive Nut'.15
Tuna Fish.......15
Fried Egg........15
Jelly-Peanut Butter 15
Minced Ham.....10
Just Jersey Ice Cream
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-New Orleans Times Picayune.

- -

A Washington
BYSTANDER

AT THE MAJESTIC
"THE DEVIL IS A WOMAN"

A Paramount picture starring Marlene Dietrich
and Lionel Atwill.
Meat and bread for the oppressed and lovelorn
male is the current showing at the Majestic, "The
Devil Is A Woman," starring Marlene Dietrich.
But above that, an attraction in itself, the offering
is above the average of summer entertainment.
The stony is of Concha, enigmatic and capricious,
a peasant girl who rises as the belle and toast of all
Spain, leaving behind her a scarlet trail of broken
hearts and lives of men who have loved her. Defy-
ing prediction, Concha is as brazen as she is beau-
tiful. Nothing is beyond her conscience.
The particular scene is a carnival in southern
Spain and Lionel Atwill, as the ruined army offi-
cer, recounts the affair between himself and Con-
cha to his best friend as he, too, becomes embroiled
with the notorious belle. The conclusion, turning
again on Concha's puzzling character, may or may
not soften her appellation, but it is dramatic.
The plot in itself is not superior. Josef von
Sterinberg, however, has created and filmed an
atmosphere and directed the perhaps over-dy-
namic Dietrich into a successful offering.
rnt tn least nart of the nicture's success is the

By KIRKE SIMPSON
WASHINGTON, June 27. - When Borah of Idaho
joined Huey Long of Louisiana in endorsement
of President Roosevelt's new tax proposals, Re-
publican old guard campaign planners prob-
ably suffered something of a shock. They have
been counting heavily on Borah's help next year.
His is the most powerful individual voice in the
Senate for more reasons than that he has served
two years longer in that body than any other mem-
ber.
Yet, the tax issue raised by the White House
may be the hub of the next presidential campaign.
If it works out that way, Borah's statement would
seem at this distance to preclude his employment
by the Republican managers in the national cam-
paign.
STICKS TO SENATE ROLE
BORAHis up for re-election next year unless he
should regard his public career as behind him,
of which there is no intimation. At 70 - and he
crossed that three-score-and-ten line of normal life
span this month- he is no less active than when
he came to the Senate 2a years ago.
That age fact alone would by tradition bar
the road to a presidential nomination for Borah.
Yet it is something other than that to which most
political students ascribe the fact that he is not now
and never has been very close to that honor, unique
in prestige as has been the place he has made for
himself in national, political life otherwise.
What actually has kept the "Lion of Idaho" to
his Senate role, his most ardent admirers insist,
is his unshakable belief in the two-party system.
That conception underwent its greatest strain in
1912, when Borah, after yeoman service in the ef-
fort to secure the Republican nomination for Theo-
dore Roosevelt, balked at joining the Bull Moose
bolt and figuratively sulked in his tent throughout
the campaign.
INFLUENCE ON G.O.P.
1JNDER THAT PHILOSOPHY, Borah has been
limited to a role of onlooker in more than one
presidential campaign. His support of President
Hoover is generally credited with important results.
Events soon indicated, however, that his motive

- . -v-, ..
Unbiased

I

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