THE MICHIGAN DAILY "FRIDAY, JLY 19, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Official Publication of the Summer Session a more rational viewpoint than those of the ex- treme left wing, will criticize administration efforts as simply state capitalism, a collusion between government and industry. Between and about these positions will be sta- tioned the many minority opinions, as Father Coughlin and Senator Long, with fusions of sup- port inevitable, all revolving about the same fun- damental issue. T E i, -- i "I 11 SCREEN DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 A.H. until 3:30; 11:30 a.m. Saturday. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY IL_., ,f tf' a I, I % AT THE MICHIGAN Double Fdature "CHARLIE CHAN IN EGYPT" I ** 1' .- A Washington BYSTANDER - m -" " s ' Publia'led every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. aeliber of the Western Conference Editorial Association ad the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER ASsodated 6gliegiat lrss -s194 ~ e~~rX~iwzi19 35- A ONlVASCOSIN MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fo 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. Entered at the PostdOffice at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as Bepond elass matter. Special rate of postage granted by Thrd Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, . during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, .50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 11 West 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicao, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.................JOHN C. HEALEY ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ..ROBERT S. RUWITCH &ATOCIATE EDITORS: Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas H. eene, William Reed, Guy M. Whpple, Jr. ASISTANT EDITORS: Robert Cummins, Joseph Mattes, "lsie Pierce, Charlotte Rueger. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINES MANAGER............ RUSSELL READ ASSISTANT BUS. MGR......... BERNARD ROSENTHAL Crculation Mnager............... . Clinton B. Conger BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Charles E. Brush, Frederick E. M~age. More Race i1gotryv *.*s T HE GERMAN FASCIST govern- ment's medievalism is nowhere more apparent than in the fields of sociology and ethnology. This government's witch-on-a-broomstick type of thought is exposed most clearly by recent dis- patches from Berlin, which state that "certain prominent Jew-baiters" are demanding that no Jew in the Reich be allowed to: (1) Rent apartments to Aryans. (2) Engage Aryan domestic help. (3) Attend Aryans as physicians or accept Ar- yans as clients. On first reading it appears that the Aryans, nrt the Jews, would be most likely to suffer from such an arrangement, but with typical Nazi illog- icality Julius Streicher of the government forces ignores the value of the Jew or member of any other race in contemporary society. The sheer stupidity of the "pure Aryan" myth is still, apparently, not visible to the Nazi "sci- entists." Dr. Arthur Guett, whose job it is to sterilize those who are against the government, pronounces solemnly: "The mixture of races causes the swelling of congenitally unsound elements." One of the "races" which is not supposed to mix with the Aryan "race" seems to be the Catholic "race," for the government's sterilization program is directed vehemently against Catholics, among others, and thedPope himself has seen fit to ask Herr Hitler to desist. Americans, who know full well how this country has been strengthened by the influx to our shores of all nationalities, "races," and beliefs, will not easily forgive the German socio-economic system for its crimes against humanity. The country which is willing to serve as a "melting pot" will prove superior in the end to that which wishes "purity" of its dominant myth- ical "race." Sir Josiah Raises A Fundamental Issue.. . S IR JOSIAH STAMP, the eminent British economist, is a competent observer and a qualified commentator and for that reason his observations upon a recent tour of America are especially important. Partiqularly of interest are his conclusions. He says: I left America with the impression that a country so rich in resources, so active in thought, so experimental, so irrepressible, so undaunted by disaster, cannot but rise super- ior to any wounds inflicted upon itself by a mistaken or overhasty treatment of its ail- ments. America is "coming through"-not perhaps quite as planned, but by sheer force of its own momentum, and the richness of its gifts. Gratifying as these conclusions must be to Americans at first reading, Sir Josiah has also touched upon what will inevitably be the funda- mental issue of the 1936 political campaign. That issue will supersede all issues of states' rights, pres- ervation of the constitution and other questions of the day, for they flow out of it directly - whether administration regulatory efforts have ac- tually hastened or retarded recovery and whether those efforts have been too extensive or not suf- ficiently extensive. To the old school Republicans, characterized by Ogden Mills, the answer will of course be that governmental interference has retarded na- tural recovery, and they will cite Sir Josiah as attesting to the natural recuperative powers of America without artificial stimulus. That school will be the representatives of the old conserva- tism of laissez faire and rugged individualism, and however it may have been loudly discredited ,,it hl hrc - ts inev~itable lage bp odyof supporters. By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON - If Senator Borah's declara- tion for political independence of the su- preme court represents an actual apprehension that the G.O.P. might draft its '36 standard bearer from the court on a save-the-constitution plat- form, one very practical aspect of such strategy might serve to reassure him. A supreme court vacancy thus created would be filled by President Roosevelt's appointment. Fur- thermore a Senate overwhelmingly Democratic and showing also an almost 50-50 conservative- liberal split on the minority side, would pass upon the suitability of the appointee, including perhaps the question of his political philosophy. From that point of view, the "talk" of finding a presidential candidate among the court mem- bership Borah so greatly deplores bids fair to re- main just talk. It springs, he says, from "the fer- tile brains of political strategists" who have read certain recent court opinions as coinciding with their ideas of party advantage. S * * * * MENTIONED NO NAMES THERE are three recent opinions to which this might have reference although the senator mentioned no names. He merely said that the names of two members of the court had been mentioned in connection with presidential nom- ination possibilities. Of the three opinions, two were by Chief Justice Hughes and the other by Justice Roberts. In the rail pension case these two justices were in head-on collision. Roberts voiced the five-man controlling view that the act was unconstitutional; Hughes the four-man dissent. But for his subse- quent authorship of the unanimous finding against constitutionality of NRA, Mr. Hughes' name hard- ly could have been mentioned for political con- sideration on a save-the-constitution issue idea. RISKING THE SUBSTANCE IN ANY EVENT, it is obvious that President Roosevelt does not yet regard it as impossible that the present membership of the court will sus- tain the constitutionality of some legislative ap- proach to the social reform objectives of the New Deal. His letter to Representative Hill, urging passage of the Guffey coal bill in the face of even "reasonable" doubts of its constitutionality illus- trates his position. Except for the implications of the NRA case, none would be likely to say that the further tests of constitutionality of New Deal measures would be settled except by narrow mar- gin divisions among the justices. The five-four division has been the rule; the unanimous NRA finding is the exception.' That being the case, invading the bench for a save-the-constitution presidential candidate would look a good deal like risking the substance for the shadow. It could mean the setting up of a definite liberal majority on the court against which a save- the-constitution president, even, would be all but powerless until vacancies came among the court liberals. That is likely to prove more of a deter- rent to party strategists to whom Senator Borah refers than his own highly academic argument. BOOKS By JOHN SELBY "THE ANCIENT WORLD," by T. R. Glover; (Macmillan). PERHAPS T. R. GLOVER, who is "public orator to the University of Cambridge," would be in- censed to know that his delightful "The Ancient World" suggests this subtitle to the writer: "Gos- siping Through Old Greece and Rome." Perhaps he takes his book seriously, in the bad sense of the term. Or perhaps he is the sort of man his writing would indicate, the sort who understands that, after all, history is mostly gossip, and that the informal approach to it is always better than the boiled shirt approach. Glover's ancient world is ancient Greece and Rome, really. He sideswipes the other ancient civilizations, but makes no broad appraisal of them (unlike Dr. Will Durant, whose colossal "The Story of Civilization" will be mentioned in this column tomorrow). But the two men are alike in their appreciation of ancient times as merely the dooryard of today. "The Ancient World" begins with a set of for- mulae which (the author believes) determine the course of civilization and history. One will do for an example -"ranges, rivers and roads." When he has sufficiently prepared the base, he begins consideration of Greece with a great deal about the Homeric epics, some of the most ingratiating pages ever written on old Greece, incidentally. The same indirect (yet pertinent) approach serves through the book. It is a method which leads an author into digression; Glover is forever dropping from ancient Greece into Canada or England. He admits no incongruity in thus min- gling epochs and epics. Indeed, he points out that speaking of Greek or Roman or French history is really only a convenience. The Mediterranean is one sea and the history of all it touches is one history.- "The Ancient World" is, in short, unconven- ArFox picture with Warner Oland, Pat Pat- terson, Thomas Beck. Rita Cansino. and Stepin Fetchit. Also a Paramount newsreel. Omitting a welcome number of his Chinese proverbs, but becoming irritatingly profuse in his subservient "Thank you's," Warner Oland finds the murderer here no more quickly than probably most of the audience. Hollywood's attempts to conceal some from the suspicion of the audience while on the other hand broadly and falsely hinting that a young inno- cent is the murderer, makes it easy to narrow the field down to two. When one of these is murdered, it's all over. Spookery comes in mostly during the sporadic excursions of archeologists and Chan into the tombs of the Egyptian queen, which is guarded by the Goddess of Vengeance. The murderer often lurks here, and his villainy in these eerie sur- roundings provides the only real thrills. Stepin Fetchit is in Egypt to demonstrate the Negro's reaction to mummies and goddesses of vengeance, which he does amusingly. The others in the cast are either pleasant or evil, as occasion demands. * * * * VOL. XVI No. 22s FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1935t Professer Charles L. Jamison, Pro-t fessor of Business Policy, will give a lecture on "Salaries and Services" to- day, Friday, at 5 p.m., in the Audi-F torium of the Natural Science Build- ing. University High School Demon- stiaticn Assembly: The second dem- onstration assembly of the University High School Summer Session will bet presented this morning at ten o'clock in the University High School audi- torium. The program will be givenf by pupils in the English classes. Itt will consist of three parts: Drama-j tization of contemporary poems, an old-style Friday afternoon program,; and a playlet exemplifying the uses of grammar. All summer session stu- dents who are interested are cor- dially invited to attend the assembly. Women Students: The department of Physical Education for women will hold a picnic swim today, leaving Barbour Gymnasium at 5:30. Women students wishing to attend are asked to register in Room 15 Barbour Gym- nasium, by this noon. A small fee will be charged. Southern Club: A watermelon cut- ting for members of the Southern Club will be held in the garden of the Michigan League at 7:00 o'clock this evening. , , rried Students: All married stu- dents and their families are invited to a picnic and pot-luck supper to be held at the Island this afternoon, Activities to consist of baseball and* other games will begin at 5:00. Bring your own dishes, sand- wiches and drink and one dish to contribute to the supper. This pic- nic is under the auspices of the Mich- igan Dames. .Biologloal Chemistry 120 will meet in the West Amphitheater, West Medical Building, July 19, at 7 a.m. Excursion No. 7, General Motors Proving Ground: Those who have signified their intention of going to the Proving Ground and have not /' ** "ORCHIDS TO YOU" A Fox picture, with Jean Muir. Charles Butter- worth, John Boles, Harvey Stephens, Ruthelma Stephens, and Arthur Lake. Pale, pious, but well-liked Jean Muir gives a good demonstration in "Orchids To You" of how a modern young business woman "handles situa- tions" in the "right" way, while managing to snag a husband herself in the end. Camelia Rand (Jean Muir), owner of a flower shop, meets a pleasant young lawyer (John Boles) when he tries to evict her. She finds out, in her position of florist, a lot of things about his wife that he doesn't know. The story is rather dull in several spots. -R.A.C. P r- I PrAmolim-mmmmim" . 11- 1 1 -I 11 11 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 theright 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. Well, We Could Build A New Camp To the Soap Box: After three weeks of badly blistered heels I wish to complain to the complaint department, or grieve to the grievance committee. It may be that down south we walk a little less, but just as a matter of convenience for all, couldn't the campus buildings be a little more closely agglutinated, and the side- walks be made a little less resistant to pressure? Think of the decreased foot-power one could un- dergo in four years with existing conditions. It almost defies calculation. -Mary Louise Hooper. secured their bus tickets are requested to do so before Saturday morning. Tickets are available in the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 An- gell Hall. Busses leave from in front of Angell Hall at 8:30 a.m. instead of 8:00 a.m. Graduate School: Students enrolled in the Graduate School will not be permitted to drop courses after Sat- urday, July 20. A course is not of- ficially dropped until it is reported in the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. Students who have changed their elections since submitting election cards should call this week at the of- fice of the Graduate School, 1014 An- gell Hall. This involves the dropping and adding of courses, the substitu- tion of one course for another, as well as the change of instructors. C. S. Yoakum, Dean. All Summer School Students who have attended or graduated from Wittenberg College are invited to an All Wittenberg Picnic Sunday after- noon at 4:00. Cars will leave Trinity Church, Corner of E. William and S. Fifth Avenue at 4:00. If further in- formation is desired call 23680, Rev. Henry Yoder. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments () Occupational Information has received notice of the following U. S. Civil Service Examinations: Principal Statistician and Sr. Sta- tistician (Div. of Vital Statistics) - $4,600 to $5,600. Assistant to Senior Statistician (Bu- reau of the Census) $2,600 to $4,600. Agent, Antinarcotic Act - $2,600. Jr. Poultry Aid to Sr. Poultry Aid - $1,400 to $2,000. Notices are on file in 201 Mason Hall. Teacher's Certificates Candidates: All students in the School of Educa- tion, Literary College, College of En- gineering, and Graduate School whc expect to receive a Teacher's Certifi- cate at the end of the Summer Ses sion and who have not filled out an application blank for this purpos must do so immediately. The ap plication blanks are available in th office of the Recorder of the Schoo of Education, 1437 University Ele mentary School. Theattention o: students in the Literary College i called to the fact that this applica ion is in addition to the applicatio made to the Committee on the Teach er's Certificate of that College. Bob Ellsworth Wins 50-Yard Free Styl Bob Ellsworth continued to set th pace in Intramural swimming compe tition yesterday as he won the 50 yard free style event, besting Kello in :30.2. George Frid was third an W. Buchanan fourth. Ellsworth's victory kept him in th lead in total point scoring, with 39C Kellog, with 330 is trailing. The 50-yard backstroke event wi: be helra 5:15 p.m.Mondayin th Intramural pool. Four of the te events have been completed, the 25 yard free style, 25-yard backstrok 25-yard breaststroke and 50-yard fre style. Bridge Party Held By Michigan Dame Fifty women attended the regula Wednesday afternoon bridge part given by the Michigan Dames at 2:3 p.m. Tuesday in the Michigan Leagu League. Seven prizes were awarded to th two tables of auction and ten table of contract bridge. Mrs. Harold wo the first prize for contract bridg while Mrs. Fordell won the first priz in auction bridge. Other prizes were won by Mrs. Bee man, Mrs. Morrison, Mrs. T. G. Hob by, Mrs. Voorheis, and Mrs. Bighan Mrs. Haynes was in charge of th party. F .i ! r IF As Others See It LOST: Engraved gold wedding ring in the Kalamazoo Room of Wom- en's League. Please return to Mrs. W. E. Roth. Apt. 5, 209 S State (Above Chubb's Restaurant). 35 LOST: Gold Theta Sigma Phi soror- ity pin between Betsy Barbour, and Library. Please return to Betsy Barbour office. FOR SALE AN T I Q U E JEWELRY, bracelets, brooches. Earrings, Etc. Reason- able. 8050. 2020 Devonshire Rd. 5x ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBAIN- NE-(FRENCH ARTIST) SCENE LUXEMBURG GARDENS - $10 FRA D U L R I C H'S BOOK- STORE, CORNER EAST AND SOUTH UNIVERSITY. AIRMAN OFF FOR NORWAY MONTREAL, July 18. -(P) - Thor Solberg, Norwegian-American flier, landed at St. Hubret Airport near here late today in his plane, the Lief Erickson,.completing the first leg of his attempted flight from New York to Bergen, Norway. LOST AND FOLTND LAUNDRY On Investigating Dictators CLIFFORD ODETS, playwright and leader of the 15 "investigators" deported from Cuba re- cently, is full of indignation as a result of his party's experience. "We are going to organize another delegation to Cuba," he announced on landing in New York. Inasmuch as another party would undoubtedly encounter the same reception as the first, we hope Mr. Odets will think again and become practical. After all, why should there be astonishment over the Cuban government's summary treatment of his group? It is a dictatorship, maintaining itself by force, and investigation is something which no dictatorship anywhere tolerates. Too, Cuba is a sovereign nation, and may welcome or bar visitors as it pleases, just as the United States does. We agree with Mr. Odets and his friends in con- demning Cuba's government, we sympathize with the plight of her people, but we disagree with the tactics the group used to show its sentiments. So we offer a suggestion: Mr. Odets is an ac- complished and forceful playwright, an acknowl- edged master in the drama of protest. Let him bend his talents to writing a play about the Cubans and their troubles. Such a work would* be a far greater contribution to their cause than any unofficial investigation. Nor could it possibly be construed as American interference with Cuban affairs, which Mr. Odets and his friends rightly deplore. A play of this sort would attract large and enthusiastic audiences, both because of the playwright's skill and the advance advertising it has received. --The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Let's Have A Debate N ORMAN THOMAS says that his offer to de- bate Huey Long "any time and any place" still holds good. What does the Kingfish say about this? Thomas intends to go into Louisiana on a speak- ing tour, in the course of which, according to a statement by the executive committee of the So- cialist party, he will "fully deflate Long as a candidate for the presidency." Here, then, is an opportunity for Long to meet Thomas on the Sen- ator's home grounds. Long has charged that President Roosevelt is sending Thomas down into Louisiana. That, of course, is an absurd thing to say, but if Long really believes it, there is all the more reason why is New Efforts Of Cooperation To Be Pushed Here Great Era Of Constructive Relations With Other Universities Seen (Continued from Page 1) whose feet I for one often sit in hu- mility and wonder, has not always been encouraged by teachers in the high school and college to feel that her pursuit and ours are one in kind and dignity. "I cannot but hope that the con- ferences and discussions in which the representatives of collegiate and sec- ondary education in this association are to participate are to bring us into most fruitful intimacy with each other, and to lead us to large and catholic views of education. Never before, I think, has the interest in education been so widespread and profound as it is now. Never before have so many of our earnest and gifted scholars been engaged in the study of educational problems. We therefore enter upon our work under the most auspiciousncircumstances. Fired With Enthusiasm Fired with enthusiasm for our call- ing as teachers, let us, representatives of ten great states, do our utmost by the deliberations and discussions of this association, to make our sec- ondary and higher education of the highest service to these common- wealths and to the whole nation." Even since this declaration of Pres- ident Angell, Professor Koch pointed out, the University has attempted to carry on this principle of co-opera- tion and has attempted to refine it wherever possible. In this regard, the speaker stated, the University has happily been free from statutory lim- itations since it, unlike most State universities, has never been compelled to accept the graduates from all standard high schools in the state. The active work of the Bureau at present is carried on by three com- mittees, Professor Koch said. These committees are the Central Commit- tee on Co-operation with Educational Institutions, the Committee on Rela- tions with Institutions of Higher Ed- ucation, and the Committee on Rela- tions with Secondary Schools. Strives For Two Goals At present, the Bureau, in addition to making more adequate its em- phasis on relationships between the University and other schools of the State, is striving for two other goals, Professor Koch stated. It seeks tc extend these relationships not only to secondary schools and junior col- leges, but to all educational institu- tions, and a concerted attempt is being made to co-ordinate and cen- tralize the activities of the Bureau LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. lx PERSONAL laundry service. We take individual interest in the laundry problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594. 611 E. Hoover. * 3x STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006, 4x 0 n :e e [l - y n I- 'e l- )g ze 0. l - e, e y 30 ie. ie es an ze e- b- n. .e t MAJ ESTIC 2 ~ MATINEES 2CBALC. EVENINGS 35c Main Floor, Evenings Ends Tonight MAY ROBSON "STRANGERS ALL" and LEO CARRILLO 'THE WINNING TICKET" TOMORROW Meet The Thin Man's Hard Boiled Brother GEORGE RAFT "THE GLASS KEY" Dashill Hanmett's-'Thrilling Story of a pretty tough guy! MICH IGAN MATINEES 2 C Balcony Evenings 35c Main Floor Evenings - Today - Two Features - All-Mystery Program WARNER OLAND "CHARLIE CHAN INEGYPT" and JEAN MUIR JOHN BOLES "ORCHIDS TO YOU" Sunday MIRIAM HOPKINS "BECKY SHARP" , 4 Today - Saturday Ben Bernie, George Raft "STOLEN HARMONY" plus JACK I E COOGAN "HOME ON THE RANGE" Sunday - Monday - Tuesday "GO INTO YOUR DANCE" plus -- "THE GIRL FROM 10th AVE." t e S e ii t e l n e e >, 4 Y S , Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre Perfor-mance Tonight JOHN DR IN KWATER'S r ENGLISH RURAL COMEDY