THE MICHIGAN DAILY SA THE MICHIGAN DAILY Official Publication of the Summer Session '. ' . .re..T-.' w Publisned 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. $5ociatt4 ccvgat ci t -94 1933 . NAiON iA>1934L MEMBER. OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use Tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it ornot otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Enteredat the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summerbyrcarrier, $1.25; by mail, $1.50. During rgular school year by carrier, $3.75; by Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Iia-e., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Phone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR...............E. JEROME PETTIT ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR .. BRACLEY SHAW WO).ENS EDITOR........ ... ... ELEANOR JOHNSON ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Charles A. Baird, Clinton B. Con- ger, Paul J. Elliott, Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas I. I Kleene, William R Reed, Robert S. Ruwitchl. RB OFRTRIW: Barbara Bates C. H. Beukema, Donald R, Bird, Ralph Danhoff, Frances English, Elsie Pierce, Vir- ginia Scott, Bernard H. Fried. BUSINESS STAFF Office Hours: 9-12, 1-5 Phone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE 4SST, BUSINESS MANAGER ......W. GRAFTON SHARP CIRcULATION MANAGER ........CLINTON B. CONGER "Tempest I A Tepot"... TIHE MOVEMENT started by the Landladies League of Ann Arbor iii an attempt to increase room rents for students during the coming year is merely a "tempest in a teapot" and is undoubtedly doomed. to failure. Since 1922 householders have been agitating for higher room rents. Even during the golden era of prosperity when they were charging exorbi- tant rates and getting away with it they con- plained, saying that they weren't even getting enough returns to pay their taxes. At the present time their cris carry a great measure of truth. Rents are so low in some Cases that living expenses and taxes cannot be paid. This, however, was not due to any cutthroat competition among the landladies themselves but rather to the general economic condition through- out the country. However, we are certain that any efforts on the part of this small but zealous group of women will go for nought for a number of reasons. First, the law of supply and demand will check rises in rents. Admittedly the supply of rooms in Ann Arbor is greater than the demand. Therefore, if members of this league, which is a very small minority of the number of householders in Ann Ar- bor, did succeed in raising their rents the flow of students would naturally go to those houses which had not raised rents. Then, instead of getting three dollars for their rooms in place of the three-fifty that they raised the rent to, the league landladies would get nothing. It certainly wil take no stretch of reasoning on the part of the landladies to realize that something is better than nothing and to pro- tect themselves they will have to drop their plans. Second, landladies in Ann Arbor were requested to make out price lists for the rooms in their houses and hand those lists to the Dean's office not later than July 15. The University holds the right to scratch from the approved lists anyhouseholder who changes the prices of her rooms between that date and the opening of school in the fall. If the league gets even as much as a third of the Ann Arbor householders to raise their prices on rooms the University would be able to strike off their names from the approved list and still have enough householders left for student roomers. Too many of the householders in Ann Arbor need the rent they derive from student rooming for subsistence and are satisfied to take any kind of rent rather than none at all. We believe that the householders who are leaders in this movement ought to settle back for a mo- ment an remember the golden era in which they 'fleeced' the student and then realize that if an average were taken of prices of rooms during a period of 20 years the householders would certainly not be on the short end of the deal. World Peace - Will It Stand?.... TIHE DISTANT RUMBLINGS of eco- nomic, social, and political dissen- tion in Europe and the Far East once again bring home the realization that a world tragedy is por- tending. As these far-away mutterings increase in volume and frequency, the United States, in her position of doubtful, isolation, gazes anxiously from one antagonist to the other in the hope of prog- nosticating the course of future developments. .With ugly visions of the last war still clouding the straggling remnants of the mythical ideal, "democracy," the people of America as a whole are probably more opposed to war than ever before. But it is with the students of the universities and colleges of the country that this adverse sentiment against war receives perhaps its greatest impetus. Forming various local clubs and associating them- his intelligence. With the first loud blare of the war trumpets, however, and with the flood of in- sidious misrepresentation and prejudicial lore which inevitably precedes, accompanies, and fol- lows the beginning of actual hostilities, the stu- dent would doubtless experience many of the prim- itive sensations which besieged his ancestors under similar conditions. The shrill, lively airs of military bands, the smart tread of marching feet, the general carnival atmosphere which seems to cloak military preparations with a kind of false halo - all these would serve to awaken in his breast long-dormant desires to be a hero. But cold reason would finally supplant the student's first wild impulses for ostentatious display, and he would begin to weigh the possible consequences of a war in relation to himself. His first thoughts are neither socially constructive nor patriotically blind. They are primarily selfish, in that they are devoted wholly to ideas of self-preservation. Con- flicting images thrust themselves upon his con- sciousness. Sparkling visions of glory pale into significance before the realistic pictures of a hor- rible death, capture, or disablement for life. Concurrent with these basic feelings are those of a penetrating skepticism and a potent desire to know the "why" of it all. As a student of various economic, social, and political theories, he arrives at the conclusion, sooner or later, that war is in- finitely wasteful and inanely destructive of all that is fine and good in life. The futility of fighting for an unknown cause, or for some commercial or political interest disguised thinly as patriotism, leaves the student passionately consecrated to the promotion of peace. Too often, against his better judgment, he has been forced or shamed into the line of march by a propaganda-aroused public opinion. Finally, the college-trained person, with his knowledge of the present and past trends of history, seeks to peer into the future. He can visualize the disruption of the intricate machinery of society itself as an aftermath of militant lusts. In this sense, he has transcended the bonds of con- fining self to the higher realm of thought and speculation. In this sphere of loftier ideals, social values are measured in terms of "utilitarianism," the doctrine which states that "virtue is defined and enforced by its tendency to promote the high- est happiness of mankind." People who view life from this more human angle see themselves, not only as individuals with the individual's love of personal satisfaction, but also as vital parts or cogs in a.larger whole. Sociologists are wont to call this kind of conception or variations of it, the "organic viewpoint," which has been common par- lance among philosophers of centuries. H.' G. Wells, noted British author, predicts a world war in 1940-a struggle which, he main- tains, will be to end war. Certainly, with the pres- ent scale of armament increase, and with the in- tense nationalistic fervor sweeping over Europe, a conflict may be reasonably expected much sooner Movies For Advertising.. . T HAT THE VENALITY and brazen commercialism exhibited in the current motion picture "Heat Lightning" will not be duplicated by Hollywood is to be strongly hoped The production mentioned above, cheaply done throughout, was patently subsidized by the Coca- Cola Co. This concern's attempt to reach the public through the medium of that which passes for entertainment was tawdry in the highest de- gree, and is to be deplored.. No less than five times, bottled Coca-Cola or Coca-Cola by the glass was crassly displayed in the exact center of the screen, so that the public could not fail to notice that the near-stars o "Heat Lightning" were quenching their desert- bred thirst with the "one and only" drink. The sound track was utilized as well. One char- acter was given the lines "Give me a bottle of Coca Cola!" She gets it. Her husband says "Give me a lemon pop." He gets just what his wife did. Sh( replies to his modest demurrer "Why you know you really like Coca-Cola best." With the em phasis strongly upon the name of the drink. It is not past belief that the beer companies, too paid for their plug in "Heat Lightning." The ceaseless demand of the principal players fo bottled beer was carried suspiciously far. Radio advertising is tolerated, and what a beat- ing the American public is taking! . When the bottled-drink big-wigs invade the mo tion pictures, though, the time has come to call halt. All motion pictures carrying advertising shoulc be boycotted. The individual theatre managers car help out by striving to keep these messes away from a tired and helpless, advertising-beater America. An NRA Ideal In Contemporary Fact .. . .N THE bISBARMEN'I of 28-year. 1 old lawyer Hi Summer, of St. Louis by the St. Louis Court of Appeals, we have ai excellent example of an ideal the present NRJ legislation is designed to build up in all trade: and crafts, industries and businesses. Lawyer Summer was accused, not by officers o the law, but by the St. Louis Bar Association, hi own fellow craftsmen. He was charged, not witl violation of a law, but with unethical conduct For "ambulance chasing" and bribing policemei to obtain quick "inside dope" the men of hip own profession disowned him, and the court ha; taken away his right to practice. The law is an old profession, and self -disciplini within it is not new. Tradition that comes witl age, solidarity that gives rise to professional prid (and shame), and the high ethical standard the lawyers' social position requires, unite in sucl a case as that in St. Louis, and the welfare of th group, and incidentally of society, is secured by the expulsion of the offender. Such is the case with law. For the many businesa and industrial units put under codes since las June a similar self-discipline was envisioned. Bu pull and haul sort of adjusting is going to pre- cede it. The case of the St. Louis shyster lawyer still is interesting as proof that self-discipline within a group is both possible and practicable. The time when all the units of business and industry can maintain their ethical health as competently, Gen- eral Johnson will be in his heaven, if he has not already passed on to a more traditional one. 1 As Others See it HOLLYWOOD, FAIRYLAND Hollywood, the fairyland of perpetual sunshine, fabulous salaries, pretty men, "glamorous ladies; of the Trojan football team, child prodigies, and Aimee Semple McPherson. Hollywood of the lav- ender roadsters, potted palms, pink Spanish bun- galows, and Iowan autograph-seekers. It is all- American ballyhood, where the American flag flies in the artificial breeze of an electric fan, where the stage is set daily, where the lives of a fortunate few are governed by the gods in the casting office, where eccentricity is at a premium and sex is the standard of values. If you aren't unusual, have no complexes, aren't interested in becoming a mu- seum piece in the world's greatest collection of human oddities, Hollywood is no place for you. If you can't sing under water, play polo, dance on a table, or ride a velocipede down the street nonchalantly, stay where you are. But surely, you ask, these things have nothing to do with being a capable actress or actor? You're right, they haven't, but they have everything to do with publicity, and publicity is the life-blood of the industry. Unless millions of office-girls, high school chilren, shoe-clerks, and house wives are kept constantly convinced that the Elysian fields of Hollywood are filled with smiling, sun-tanned children of fortune who gratify their every whim with sheaves of twenty dollar bills, the box offices show a dangerous slump in sales. Acting is a sideline, the business is actually one of getting the public eye and keeping it. The star's success is determined by the weight of her fan mail, her bust measurement, and the number o column inches she can gain on the front pages of daily papers. The moment you and I stop won- dering why Sally Snicklefritz paints her toe-nails green, and what became of her fourth husband, poor Sally is on the skids. A trip to Europe, per- sonal appearances, and two dozen revealing news pictures are all that can save her. And does the public swallow this? It eats it up faster than the movie magazines can dish it out. It laps it up so thoroughly that it has to come to Hollywood and see for itself. Daily trains unload hundreds of mid-western farmers, runaway girls from eastern cities, and otherwise sensible folk who have succumbed to the glittering phrases of a board of commerce booklet. Hollywood must .continue the illusion they have brought with them; hence the motion picture premieres which are attended by the casts "in the flesh"; hence the searchlights playing up and down the crowded boulevards; hence the ornate and flimsy bunga- lows; hence the constant appeal with the unusual and bizarre. If you assert that my portrayal of the film capitol has been unjust and exaggerated, I answer your assertion by asking if you have ever seen a thundering, swaying mass of humanity straining eager eyes to catch a glimpse of an over-dressed blonde child who is supposed to have glamou. Have you ever seen four dozen supposedly refined women claw at each other in a frantic attempt tc get a frilly-haired chorus boy to sign their pro- grams? What other town changes the name of its f main street to "Santa Claus Lane" for the Christ- mas season? The whole picture is so grotesque with its friv- olity, scheming sensationalism, and tragedy inter- - mingled with hopes and illusions as to make the place utterly different from any other either here e or abroad. It is truly the melting-pot of Americar culture, theology, ideas, and ideals. ON WOMEN'S WISDOM It is a sign of women's wisdom that they have e almost always known how to get themselves sup- r ported, like drones in a bee-hive. Let us jus consider what this meant originally, and why men - do not depend upon women for their support. Of a truth it is because masculine vanity and reverence - are greater than feminine wisdom; for women a have known how to secure for themselves by their subordination the greater advanage, in fact, the upper hand. Even the care of children may orig- j inally have been used by the wisdom of women as y an excuse for withdrawing themselves as much as a possible from work. At present they still under- stand when they are really active (as housekeepers, for instance) how to make a bewildering fuss about it, so that the merit of their activity is usually ter times over-estimated by men. -Nietzsche. Graduate School: All GraduateX School students who expect to com- plete their work for a degree at the! close of the present summer session should call at the office of the Gradu- ate School, 1014 Angell Hall, to check their records and to secure the proper blank to be used in paying the diplo- ma fee. The fee should be paid not later than today. G. Carl Huber Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tificate: A tentative list of candidates to be recommended for the Teacher's Certificate at the end of the summer session has been posted on the bul- letin board in Room 1431 University Elementary School. Any student whose name does not appear on this list and who wishes to be so listed should report this fact at once to the Recorder of the School of Education, Room 1437 U.E.S. Blanks for the payment of the cer- tificate fee may be secured in the of- fice of the Recorder. This fee must be paid by the end of the summer session. C. O. Davis, Secretary August Seniors, All Schools and Colleges: Students who expect to complete work for a degree at the close of the Summer Session, must pay the diploma fee before August 17. Call for the diploma fee blank at the Recorder's Office of the school in which registered. The examination in French and German for the M.A. in English will be given in Room 2225 A.H. August 10 at 1:30 p.m. Reading Requirement in German for Ph.D. candidates: Candidates in all fields except those of the natural - sciences and mathematics must ob- tain the oflicial certification of an adequate reading knowledge of Ger- man by submitting to a written ex- amination given by the German De- partment. . For the summer session this exam- ination will be given on Wednesday, August 8, at 2 p.m., in room 203 U.H Students who intend to take the ex- amination are required to register their names at least one week before the date of the examination at the office of the German Department, Room 204 U.H., where detailed in- formation with regard to examina- tion requirements will be given. Teacher's Certificate-Comprehen- sive Examination: All candidates ex- pecting to receive a Teacher's Cer- tificate at the close of the summer session are required to pass a com- prehensive professional examination covering the work of the required courses in Education leading to the Certificate. The next examination of this sort will be held this morning in the University High School auditor- ium at 9 o'clock sharp. Candidates ex- pecting to take this examination should leave their names immedi- ately with the Recorder of the Schoo of Education, 1437 University Ele- mentary School. Graduate student taking advanced degrees in Augus ewill be exempted from this examina tion 1 . C. 0. Davis, Secretary School of Education Michigan Dames: There will bea meeting of the Michigan Dames o0 Monday evening, August 6, at 8:0 o'clock in the Michigan League. Wive of students and of internes in th n University Hospital are cordially in 'ited. The committee in charge i planning an amusing evening's en- tertainment. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the Summer Session office until 3:30; 11:30 Saturday. Bishop J. Ralph Magee of St. Paul will occupy the pulpit at the First Methodist Episcopal Church, State and Washington streets, tomorrow, preaching at 10:45 on "Christian Certainties." i Congregational Church: Service ofC Worship Sunday morning at 10:45t with sermon by the minister, Rev.F Allison Ray Heaps. Subject, "Is There t Divine Guidance in Human Affairs?" James Pfohl, organist, Thelma Lewis, soloist. This will be the closing serv- ice of the summer.I Education B-182: Students in thes course in Adult Education may obtaink their Unit Summaries at the circula- tion desk of the University High School Library.- Stalker Hall: Saturday. at 1 p.m.-1 Tour to Ford Co-Operative Farms.r All students interested in the Ford farm-industry project and policy are welcome. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship Sunday are: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten; 11:00 a.m. Holy Com-; munion and Sermon by the Reverend Nathaniel Noble, "What is the Chris- tian Church?" Women's Riding Classes: Women students wishing to ride Saturday are to call 7418 to make arrangements. Speech Students: Mr. Leo Fitzpat- rick, President of WJR, Good Will Radio Station of Detroit, will speak Son the subject, "How to Get into Ra- dio Work," at the student-faculty lurncheon of the Depatment of Speech and General Linguistics to be held at the Michigan Union Tues- day, August 7, at 12:10 p.m. All Uni- versity students and townspeople are invited. The Michigan League Against War and Militarism meets Monday, August 6, at 5 p.m., in the Union. Camp News BIOLOGICAL STATION July 29 - The University of Michi- gan Biological Station, Douglas Lake, Cheboygan County-Besides the par- ty of Saturday night, the big event of the week was the all-day trip to Mackinac Island. The party which 1 was called a "Deutscher Verein" in- cluded a program of singing in Ger- iman and dancing by bar maids at- tired in costume.! Sunday morning at 7:00 a number of parties left in cars for Cheboygan i where they boarded a boat for Mack- - inac Island. When it landed on the 4 Island; the group dispersed and fol- - lowed their own interests, visiting Old s Fort Mackinac, taking the trip around t the Island in carriages or by boat, and - having a generally good time. Lunch- es were sent with each person from the dining room. The ride home was rainy and a bit rough but well en- SIf you writes we' ae it. n Correspondence Stationery, 0 FomaintE. Pes$ In, etc s Typewriters all nakes. e Greeting Cards for body. - O. D.MORR ILL s 14 S. State St., Ann Arbr. speakers Charge That It Has Brought Econoinric Dictatorship PLYMOUTH, Vt., Aug. 3. -(AP")- Nearly 5,000 persons gathered today in the quiet mountain valley where Calvin Coolidge lies beneath the un- trimmed turf to venerate a departed President and to hear criticisms of the administrations. On the eleventh anniversary of the induction into office of the former Vermont farm boy, Senator Warren R. Austin, of Vermont, Rep. James M. Beck, of Pennsylvania, and other speakers charged that the New Deal had brought regimentation, bureau- cracy and economic dictatorship. "The New Deal, or Misdeal," said Beck, "assumes that the State, work- ing, through bureaucratic agencies, knows better what is for the welfare of a man than the man himself." It was the old Coolidge homestead a short distance up the road that Cal- vin Coolidge was administered the oath of office by his father, Col. John Coolidge, after word was received that President Warren Harding had died. A large grandstand, covered with a canvas canopy, had been erected across the road from the country graveyard where the former President is buried beside his son, Calvin, Jr. Amplifiers sent the voices of speakers reverberating among the peaks. Rep,. Beck, introduced by Gov. Stanley C. Wilson, of Vermont, level- ing hi$ attack at what he termed the "Misdeal," said. "I appreciate that the dictatorial power of the NRA and the AAA have been exercised by an iron hand wield- ed in a velvet glove. A pretended spirit of moderation has been one conces- sion to the American spirit, but dic- tatorial because they might be apol- ogetically exercised or because there are assurances of extreme considera- tion for the victim." joyed, and Sunday evening about 8 p.m. the trip was completed. Former students of the Station who visited here this week were: E. L. Cheatum, Robert L. Brown, Joe Tidd, Don Thomas, Dr. Henry Vander Scha- lie, and Alexander Smith. Other visi- tors included Dr. Helene E. Schutz from the Health Service, Miss Mar- garet French, and Mr. Fallis from the Ontario Research Foundation. Pro- fessor L. J. Young from the University School of Forestry and Conservation and Professor E. L. Stover of the Il- linois Normal School at Charleston, Ill., and Mrs. Stave are spending the rest of the session here. -Florence D. Muyskens, '37 'New Deal' Is Criticized At Coolidge Shrine 4Q Doff AT TA, Eddie Bob LAUGHTON & WOODRU"' _ and Their Music Dancing every nloht exceia MOR. ...Adnssion 40 at Mrichigan's' Most Beautiful Summer Ballroom rI E -I S 'i I THE NEW BROADWAY SUCCESS Doub e Doo".r'lh THE MELODRAMA THAT WON THE APPLAUSE OF NEW YORK FINAL PERFORMANCE TONIGHT at 8:30 Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre Admissions: 75c, 50c, and 35c Phone 6300 - Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep away from it. COMING TO THE MAJESTIC "THE OLD FASHIONED WAY" W. C. Fields and his star "mellerdrammer" troupe of stock actors appear at the Majestic today in Paramunt's story of stage life in the gay nineties, "The Old Fashioned Way." With Baby LeRoy, Judith Allen, Richard Carle, and some twenty others in the cast, the show offers a mix- ture of comedy and drama - built largely around Fields' wit and acting ability Theplot concerns the troubles of an earnest, but floundering, traveling company of actors who are held together only by Fields' fluent assurances and clever devices. Baby LeRoy proves to be the fly in his ointment, continuing the well-known feud between W. C. Fields and the baby. When Fields plays up to a homely but rich spinster to keep his show going, the real comedy of this impressario is paraded in all its trimmings. The advantageous Results of Classified Advertising have been proven. Cash Rates IC a Line The Michigan Daily Maynard Street Read The DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS' The flnlv mcintnins a ATTEND ATTEND COOL MATINEES. . . . MIC H A IGAN . . , .COOL MATINEES JOAN BLONDELL WARREN WILLIAM SMART Also Comedy -- Sportlight -- Oddity -- News ..MAJESTIC . . . . . . . . .. \paily Matinee 25c Nights & Sundays, Balcony 25c, Main Floor 35c NOW- "Old-Fashioned Way with W. C. FIELDS and BABY LeROY