THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUG. 12, 191 THE MICHIGAN DAILY The New Bar President Dejender Of Doheny And Fall.Elected To Head Association I---- The Editor Gets Told Ii -.R, , .- , 1 dited and managed by students of the University of higan under the authority of the Board in Control of Publishea every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session 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 :newspaper. All 4ihts of republication of all other matters herelh also reserved. Entered at the Post Offee at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $49 Q; aby mal, $4.50. &fere Associated Collegate Press, 1937-38 REPSESNTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING GY National Advertising ServiceIne. Golege Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICMAO ' oston . LS ANELEs - SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors M GING EDITOR. IVING SILVERMAN ity .ditor .Robert I. Ftzhenry Assistant Editors ........Mel Finebeg, Joseph Gies, Elliot Maraniss, Ben M. Marino, Carl Petersen, Suzanne Potter, Harry L. Sonneborn. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER ... ERNEST A. JONES Credit Manager . . . Norman Steinberg Circulation Manager . . . J. Cameron Hall Assistants . . Philip Buchen, Walter Stebens NIGHT ED OR: HARRY L. SONNEBORN The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers It is important for society to avoid the neglect of adults, but positively dangerous for it to thwart the ambition of youth to reform the world. Only the schools which act on this belief are educational institu- tions in the best meaning of the term. -Alexander 0. Ruthven. ofrrr From TheAir... H ORROR STORIES in war time are always dangerous. Even incontro- vetiple atrocities can often be explained away b3' professional apologists, and indeed most atrocities in modern warfare stem from the fact of war itself under 1938 conditions rather than frqm the character of the combatants. Given a state of war, it is inevitable that slaughter, star- vation and desolation occur on a gigantic scale. Even a "border incident" in this decade of de- struction means the use of six-inch guns on a four-nile front, with 10,000 men engaged. And yet, even granting the significance of modern machines of war in fixing responsibility for the carnage, a human factor nonetheless re- mains. The military methods of the fascist na- tions, as paraded in three separate wars of ag- gression, have-exhibited a brutality and indiffer- ence to human life shocking beyond words to the ordinary newspaper reader. During the conquest of Ethiopia, Italian planes repeatedly bombed the primitive and totally defenseless native villages, on one occasion drop- ping leaflets. along with the projectiles asking, with typical fascist humor, if the Emperor's um- br lla had protected him from the bombs. The crude Ethiopian huts burned like tinder, while thejr wounded inhabitants (less fortunate than thpse killed outright) died of the lingering effects of gangrene in the absence of medical attention. On March 19 of this year, the Associated Press reported that "a lull in the deadly roar of Insur- gent bombers gave blood-drenched Barcelona a merciful, although apprehensive respite today . .. "There were 640 shattered bodies, most of them 'mangled beyond identification, laid out in grotesque rows in over-taxed morgues Highest estimates placed the dead at 1,300 and injired at more than 2,000 in the 13 Insurgent attacks.' "More than 700 wounded, including 75 small boys and girls, were crowded into Clinic Hospital alone . . Many women were among the dead, their heads crushed by fallen masonry and beams. Near their bodies were those of 12 babies, streaks of dried blood on their dirt- covered faces " Monday another Associated Press dispatch, this time from Canton, China, reported that "men, women and children seeking refuge in the grounds of Canton's Catholic Cathedral in a Japanese air raid were blown up today by three bombs that exploded within 20 yards of the building. At least 39 of them were killed and 50 injured "Bishop Antoine Fourquete, who has seen 43 years of service in Canton, walked through the cathedral grounds after the attack looking over the rows of bodies of many small children. 'I can't understand the reason for this,' he said. 'There are no guns and no soldiers in this area.'" No, there were no guns and no soldiers in the cathedral, but there were human beings: Fascist war is made not only on the enemy in uniform, but on the enemy in civilian clothes, in workers' blouse, in housewife's apron and in child's dress. The American Bar Association has had some distinguished presidents in its 60 years. Taft and Hughes and Root are on the long list. So are Frederick W. Lehmann, Moorfied Storey and T. M. Cooley. But not all the bar's heads have measured up to this standard, and in recent years the general character of its leadership has been disquieting. Just how a new president is settling himself into office. He is suave, charming Frank J. Hogan of Washington, famed as a book collector and for hospitality where hospitality is- a highly devel- oped profession. The career of Mr. Hogan is as amazing a success story as the bar has produced. His father died when he was 5 and he stopped school in the fourth grade to be a $2-a-week cash boy. He becaine a railroad messenger. He sold papers. One of his superiors, impressed by his ambition, ar- ranged a reading course. Someone taught him shorthanid: One job led to another ,always better. The end of the Spanish-American War found him in the War Department and a law student at Georgetown University. His rise in the bar of Washington was meteoric. He won so many damage suits against the old Capital Traction Co. that the company in self- protection finally hired him as its chief counsel. Wills became his specialty, and for years he was in every' important will case in the District. He went into the big money almost at the outset of his practice. Million Dollar Fee Mr. Hogan's first Base of national importance was the famous Riggs Bank case. It is doubtful, if a lawyer ever made a bolder stroke than he in that case. The bank had sued Secretary McAdoo and other Treasury officials in 1915, and the Government, in turn, indicted the bank officers. Hogan, as defense lawyer, called Theodore Roosevelt and Taft, the only living ex-Presidents at the time, as character witnesses for his clients. The proof of his shrewdness came when the jury, without a ballot, called out its verdict of "Not guilty!" from the box. By the time the scandals of the Harding admin- istration broke upon the' country, Mr. Hogan was pre-eminently established as the high-priced protector of defendants like Albert B. Fall and Edward L. Doheny. His appeal to the jury to acquit them of fraud charges in the notorious Elk Hills Naval Oil Reserve case in 1926 was liter- ally astounding, considering the case and the men on trial. Making no attempt to present a connected review of the testimony, he pitched his address on a plane of high emotionalism. Fall was "the man who was chosen to sit in the Cabinet by the, most beloved President we ever had, or ever will have, Warren G. Harding." Doheny was "this gray-haired man, with only one child, ,the son' whom he sent to fight and possibly die for ,his country." Together they were "a. pair of old prospectors," the good companions, who had shared burdens on the long trail. The passionate appeal, upraised finger and pacing before the jury box are fresh again after 12.years: The Riggs Bank Case If you believe that Mr. Doheny is a briber, a cheater, a trimmer, a perjurer and a con- spirator, then by the ever-living God I have lost that faith in human nature which until" a moment ago I so proudly proclaimed-.. .Do you believe it? Do you? Do you? And you? . . . For God's sake, remember your mothers DEWEY An Appraisal By Raymornd Moley Raymond Moley in Newsweek The most important county officer in this country is the pr'osecutor. His great potential power enables him to set the tone of efficiency and to define the political ethics of local govern- ment. He can, if he is competent, independent and courageous, keep the entire local public ser- vice 'alert and honest. If not, graft and incompe- tence usually get the upper hand. Thomas E. Dewey is District Attorney of New York County, one of the five counties of New York City. It is no longer the most populous county in the city, but in the world of politics it is the best known. For one thing, it is the home of' Tammany Hall. Almost inevitably, the holder of this office becomes a state, occasionally a national figure. Mr. Dewey has already achieved that distinction. For. this reason great interest attaches to the record he is making, not only in the spectacu- lar cases on which he has been working, but in the routine of his office. He has reported on the first six months of his work, and his report is astonishing. He has got 63 per cent of convictions in all jury trials. In 25 years the nearest to this extraordinary achievement was the 19 4 record of 60 per cent of convictions by Charles S. Whit- man, subsequently Governor. * * * - Lest there be misunderstanding here, it should be noted that many prosecutors claim high per- centages by including as convictions pleas. of' guilty, usually to a lesser offense-a deceptive and thoroughly unjustifiable way of building up a record. Reformers sometimes claim that justice is not well served when great numbers of people are punished. But the point here is that Dewey has succeeded in convicting those whom he has be- lieved to be guilty. He has not wasted time and energy in futile prosecutions. This is doing' his job efficiently, and doing 4n efficient job ofw prosecuting does not imply a ruthless pursuit of. the innocent and friendless. Dewey has also, for all practical purposes, put an end to the thoroughly bad habit of "bargain- ing" with criminals foi' leas of gniltv-nnt in and wives and sisters, men. Give the reply to this thing that honor and decency demand. When you go to your jury room, think whether there is any man in the country who could have received such a certificate of character . . . Banker and mechanic, Catho- lic Bishop and Methodist preacher, mer- chant and prosecutor-they have paraded to this witness stand and told you of his stainless character and his heart of gold ...Today before the sun sets, I hope you are back with your families, and I ask you today, before the sun sets, to send thes. two defendants back to their families! But before that' unburdening, had come an assault upon the Government's prosecutor, ap- pointed, it should be remembered, by Calvin Coolidge. "During the last hour," Mr. Hogan said, "you, listened to as vicious a vilification of honorable men -as ever polluted the air of a courtroom. The artist who addressed you knows what bunk is. He got away with all he couldBut he did not convince you this venerable gentle- man is a trafficker in the noble impulse of love of Country." The vicious vilifier and court polluter was Owen J. Roberts, since 1930 Justice of the Supreme Court. But before Mr. Roberts' appoint- ment to the bench, the Supreme Court had, in 1927, passed judgment on Mr. Hogan's clients. Castigating their fraudulent methods, it voided the leases, restored the property to the Govern- ment, and called Fall a faithless public official. Turned On The Rhetoric How much Hogan got for defending Fall and Doheny is not a matter of public record. The Washington Post said recently that "there has always been good reason to believe that he was paid considerably more than $1,000,000." An- other case and another fee in the same category were those growing out of the Government's at- tempt to collect more than $3,000,000 in income taxes from Andrew W. Mellon, charged with con- spiracy to defraud. During the trial, Hogan jok- ingly told listeners, after a conference with Mellon, that his client had said in effect: "After I get through with you, I won't have any money left, anyway!" There is the case of William P. MacCracken whom the Senate charged with contempt when he failed to bing pertinent files to the commit- tee investigating air mail contracts. Hogan was his defender and went to ridiculous lengths to have MacCracken arrested by the Senate ser- geant-at-arms so he might serve a writ of habeas corpus, which would have paved the way for removal of the case from the Senate's hands. In the end, the Supreme Court upheld the Senate and MacCracken went to jail. The list of Hogan's cases and exploits could be extended. Does Frank Hogan truly represent the spirit and purpose of the American Bar Association, in whose ranks are many of the most distin- guished lawyers of the United States? Or issthe honor which has been bestowed upon him merely a routine reward of long membership, seniority and popularity? If the leadership of the American bar is measured in those terms, then the people must look elsewhere for the kind of thought and action that represents the fine tradition of the law. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch Ii eent l M Heywood Broun Senator Norris makes an excelent suggestion in urging the appointment of Felix Frankfurter to the Supreme Court. As the grand old gentle- man from Nebraska says, Frankfurter is the logical man to carry on the tradition of Holmes and Cardozo. Not only is he spiritually akin to these jurists, but he was, in fact, close in their confidence and counsel. It is entirely possible that a sharp fight might be waged in the Senate against the confirmation of the Harvard professor. But that is all the more reason for sending in his name. At times the Supreme Court has seemed to drift away from democratic processes. In part, that fault may have been conditioned by the fact that, unlike the other two co-ordinate branches of our government, the Court was held to be above criticism by press and public. One of the excellent by-products of the fight for judicial reform has been the growing popular knowledge of Americans in regard to the Supreme Court as an institution and its members as flesh and blood individuals. Of course, the Court should command respect. For that matter, so should the Chief Executive and the members of Congress. Underhanded Attaccks It would be monstrous if members of the high bench were exposed to some types of abuse which have been directed against Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But, as matter of fact, it is nonstrous that underhanded attacks of this kind should be made against the President of the United states. At any rate, the rule of procedure should be the same all along the line. There should be a balance of publicity as well as a balance of power. It is quite illogical to have the members of the Supreme Court live in a bird sanctuary while their fellows on the hill are resident in a bear pit. In the case of Frankfurter he can well afford to face a rock harrae N.A nn r i bi Pniir'nari by Seeks Aid For Southern School To the Editor: I have just returned from a two- weeks administrative trip, during which I met with the school officials of some 35 mountain counties in which the Save the Children Fund operates in five southern states. I am gravely concerned, after consult- ing with the county school superin- tendents and our Save the Children Fund welfare workers over the in- ability of many children this year to attend school at the opening of the term because they have no clothing fit to wear. Most of the mountain rural schools open in August (some even in July). The school superintendents told me that unless the children can start in at the beginning of the term, they are handicapped all the year. "But what can we do?" they asked. "Many of the boys haven't a pair of shoes or overalls; the girls not a dress to cover them." Though shoes are needed, except for the older girls all can go barefoot until cold weather comes. But'they must have clothing. Thousands of these mountain boys and girls, and I speak advisedly, are in immediate need of clothing. The stark fact confronts us that they cannot go to school without essential clothing of light weight. The gar- ments vitally needed are: suits, pants, jackets, dresses, underwear and hosiery. William C. Headrick, our welfare supervisor, 711 North Broad- way, Knoxville, Tenn., stresses the value of tennis or sport shoes for the mild weather in the fall because they are large and broad, and of sturdy shoes for older girls. Denim and materials for making clothing; mill ends-anything, in fact-are of the utmost value. Moth- ers' clubs and groups of local women areso interesteduandscooperative that they are willing to give ungrudgingly of their time to make the cloth into overall suits and dresses. The -Save the Children Fund is at this time making an emergency ap- peal to the American people. In these days, when we are so splendidly trying to meet what we feel are the minimum requirements for our boys and girls in the cities, we certainly should not forget these young people in the hills where there is no one locally to help them. These young- sters in the Southern mountains are of old pioneer stock, desecendants of Daniel Boone, Sam Houston and those pioneers who built America. The present economic impoverishment of the people is due to their isolation. The young people are intelligent and worthy of education. A considerable proportion of them will eventually seek work in the industrial cities of the north. It is of utmost importance that they have the making of good citizens. Individuals willing to bundle up a package of clothing, and manufactur- ers or dealers interested in sending material may ship their donations either to Save the Children Fund Field Headquarters, 711 North Broad- way, Knoxville, Tenn., or if they pre- fer, to the, Save the Children Fund, in care of Prof. John E. Moore, Win- chester, Tenn., who is superintendent of schools in a county in which are someof the several hundred mountain schools with which this organization is cooperating. National headquarters of the agency pride to some of the specimens with- in his album. It will be their privilege and their right to come forward, if and when his name is offered for dis- cussion. Indeed, there is no reason why such a discussion should not take on the character of a public forum. There will be health in can- dor and in frankness. The criticism should come out into the open, if it is to be made. * * *Wr Whispering Campaign Felix Frankfurter has been made the victim of an extremely vicious whispering campaign. It - is to the credit of America that prejudice has not prevailed in the matter of Su- preme Court appointments. Indeed, it did not raise its head in the case of Cardozo, but the fight against Brandeis did enlist among the oppo- sition not only religious _ but social and economic antipathies of a dis- graceful nature. It would be a misstatement if I said -that I fear the same -sort of thing may occur in the case of Frank- furter, because I don't fear it at all. It should be welcomed. Slanderers and whisperers ought to be smoked out. Let the men in little groups who talk of Moscow gold come out of their coteries and justify their twaddle if they can, or forever hold their peace. One of the ironies which rises out of what almost amounts to a na- tional passion for inaccuracy is the notion that Felix Frankfurter is a radical. He is by every thought, word and deed a member of the dying nrarm.of Rionn TL.ilrPNorris. of Ne- Children THEATRE Flail The Vagabond! By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER With as lavish a spectacle as we've seen within the modest walls of Lydia Mendelssohn, Play Production this week and next is saying it with music for the first time in a year, and for the last time this summer. As the climax to an already notable season nothing could be more splendid than the well-told tale of a street poet turned Vagabond King-for only a day, it is true, but long enough for him to save France from the belliger- ent Burgundians and to allow the fine lady of his heart to save him from both the gutter and the gallows. Sometime back in 1925 W. H. Post and Brian Hooker took Justin Huntly McCarthy's romance If I Were King and turned it into a well-loaded yet swift-moving piece of theater. The Vagabond King has just about every ingredient any theatrical producer could desire: intriguing plot, rollick- ing comedy, plenty of action, drama subtle as well as mellow, opportuni- ties for brilliant staging, one of the favorite heroes of history-and music. Rudolph Friml was responsible for the latter, and with it both as a background and as aleading element the adventure runs on to a somewhat delayed but melodious and st rring finale. Frankly, as far as the music alone is concerned, we might have expected more after a year barren of sweet sound. The tunes themselves are as mellifluous and rousing as can be found in musical comedy; yet the fact remains that they) are thrown together into a score that is woefully repetitious (as all Frinil's things), unwieldy, and ill-scored. Yet why such judicial musings when there is so much in the way of fine production to be recognized- so much, in fact, that to mention by name each well-taken part would be to well-nigh print the dr matis per- sonae verbatim. Fortunately, there is no need of quibbling over who stole the show; Vagabond King belongs to the holder of its title role, and a are in the Metropolitan Tower, 1 Madison Ave., New York. I trust that you will see your way clear to give space to this letter in your publication. Your cooperation will serve a most worthy cause. John R. Voris President and Executive Director. Foreign Films, Rebuttal To the Editor: A few of us insist that the writer of yesterday's letter concerning for- eign films should be informed that ' Ann Arbor's cinematic tastes are not quite as uncivilized as he believes. He ' will be glad to hear that we do have an Art Cinema organization, that we have seen "Peter the Great," "The Lower Depths," and "The Golem," as well as "Carnival in Flanders," "The Eternal Mask," and a few others, and that we can expect to see "Mayerling" and "Carnet de Bal," this fall. Art Cinema undoubtedly is not as active as it could be, for we seldom get more than six or eight films dur- ing a year, but even its slight activity has succeeded in partially defeating the local ignorance of what the for- eign film is achieving. As far as I know we can expect no aid from the commercial theatres. Their attitude toward foreign films furnishes further 'evidence of the viciousness of that monopoly. So un- til Art Cinema activity is extended into the Summer Session we will find ourselves either attending Repertory plays or in sheer boredom wandering into a local theatre hoping that Holly- wood has possibly produced some- thing which really merits two hours' attention. W.M.H. DAILY OFFICIAL BU LLETIN FRIDAY, AUG. 12, 1938 VOL. XLVIII. No. 40 Hopwood Contest. All manuscripts for the summer contest must be in the Hopwood Room at 4:30 p.m. on Friday afternoon. Aug. 12. Linguistic Institute Final Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Friday, in the amphithe- atre of the Rackham Building. Prof. E. H. Sturtevant will discuss "The Indo-Hittite Hypothesis." Candidates for Masters degree in Psychology. The comprehensive ex- amination will be given Saturday, Aug. 13, beginning at 8:30 a.m. Room 4129, Natural Science. The Graduate Outing Club will meet at the northwest entrance of the Rackham Building at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 14 to go to Groome's bathing beach at Whitmore Lake for swimming, baseball and a picnic. TIis is the last meeting of the summer, so come and blng your friends. The Christian Student Prayer Group will meet at 2:.0 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 14, at the north eiance of the Michigan League, from where the group will 'go by auto to Wayne to hear Paul G. Wapto, "The Bryan of the Red Race," who is speaking at 3 and 7:30 p.m. The group will hold its regular meeting between services in Wayne in conjunction with a pot- (Continued on Page 3) more convincing-nay, impellin-- Francois Villon could not be desired. Hardin Van Deursen is lusty and picaresque as a poet of the streets, imbued with natural as well as amus- ing dignity as the Lord Marshall of. France, gallantly tender as a poetic lover, and a sterling singer through- out. Quite equal to Van Deursen's Fran- cois is Mildren Olsen's Katherine, charming, well sung and well played, and of a mature dignity. And yet there remains the uproarious Tabarei of perennial Truman Smith, a per- fect Leporello to Van Deursen's Don Juan; the villainous, albeit method- ically mad, King Louis of Edward Jurist; and many more. But most important should be sung the praises of Mr. Windt for a finely conceived production, and of Musical Director Henry Bruinsma for a smooth first- night coordination of all parts in- volved. The chorus performed cap- ably, and the orchestra did remark- ably well with a thankless score and, as usual in Lydia Mendelssohn, awk- ward playing conditions. Peat May Be Answer To Economic Problem MADISON, Wis., Aug. 11.--(P)-A regional group of the National Re- sources Committee, adjourning to- day after a meeting here, decided to reconvene Oct. 18 in Madison to draw up a final recommendation on a pro- gram to alleviate economic hardships in the northern Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan cut-over land regions. C. E. Berghult, mayor of Duluth, Minn., told the conference that vast stores of peat lying many feet thick under old northern Wisconsin, Mich- igan lake beds might possibly be an economic bootstrap by which the cut- over areas could pull themselves back to economic self-support. He suggested utilization of peat commercially as fuel and as a com- bined fertilizer, and mhoisture preserv- ing soil agent. "There can be no prosperity for either Duluth or Superior, Wis. or other northern cities until the situa- tion in the hinterland is relieved," he said. The Loyalist Offensive Men Against Machinery Along The Segre Whatever it may amount to in the end, the report that the Loyalists have recrossed the Segre above Le- rida, thus delivering still another un- expected blow at a new point against Franco's inflated bastion in eastern Spain, lends to the Spanish fighting an interest it has lacked since the reb- els' Aragon offensive began to slow down in May. The Loyalists have managed one or two offensive strokes before-as at Brunete, Belchite and Teruel-and have repeatedly sur- prised the world with feats of resis- tance at critical moments. Not once, however, in the two years of the war have they shown the capacity to dis- engage themselves from the immedi- ate battle which is the foundation of genuine offensive power. They have never been able to hold in one place and hit elsewhere, as Franco did, for example, when he sent his Aragon of- fensive rolling down the Ebro with blows first from one and then from its other flank.+ Have the Loyalists achieved that power at last? Have they re-dressed, .with sheer man power and co-ordina-1 tion, the balance hitherto weighed+ down by Franco's superiority in ma-" terial and leadership? The tim schedule of the recent fighting is sug- gestive. The Loyalists crossed thei Ebro on July 25. and it was six days and perhaps other forces from the Ebro in order to meet it. Perhaps be- cause of this he was unable to to de- liver his main counterstroke on the Ebro until Aug. 6, eleven days after the surprise crossing, and so far it has been largely a failure. Two days later he called up his eighteen-year-old class of conscripts for immediate training; but on the day after the Loyalists were across the Segre, and there was a new theatre for him to defend. Nor, in the mean while, has he freed himself from the threat of the still unbroken Loyalist armies on the Sagunto front. Presumably it will take some days to learn how much weight there ac- tually may be behind these various Loyalist diversions. But they show the initiative, at least for the mo- ment, on the Loyalist side, while they, represent a strategy that can be ex- tremely serious for any enemy with- out ample, reserves. It is a strategy whereby a relatively ill-equipped in- fantry can (if there is enough of it) largely neutralize the smashing pow- ers of machinery in frontal attack. Moreover, Franco, like the Germans on the western front after their great 1918 drives, is peculiarly exposed to it by his present position. One can never tell about Snain: and n rhan r