THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 14, Pubished every morning except Monday during. the University Summer Session by the Board in.Control of Student Publica- tions. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or hot otherwise redited in this paper and the local news pub- lihed herein. Entered at the An Arbor, Michigan, pobs& fie as second: class matter. Subscription by carrier, $t.5o; by mail, $aOi Affrces Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan." EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP C. BROOKS Editorial Director......Paul J. Kern City Editor....Joseph E. Brunswick Feature Editor.....Marian L. Welles Night Editors Calton G. ChampeH. K. Oakes, Jr. John E. Davis Orville Dowzer T. E. Sunderland Reporters E. M. Hyman Miriam Mitchell Robert E. Carson Mary Lister Wi. K. Lomason ouis R. Markus BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURANCE J. VAN TUYL Advertising ..........Ray Wachter Accounts.....:.....John Ruswinckel Circulation.......... ...Ralph Miller Assistants C. T. Antonopulos S. S. Berar G. W. Platt Night Editor-PHILIP C. BROOKS THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1927 TODAY IS THE DAY } Today the boys from the Fresh Air Camp at Paterson Lake will solicit funds from students on the Campus far the support of this enterprise The Daily unqualifiedly approves of the objects and ideals of this camp, an" believes that the $500 quota de- sired should by all means be raised- The student body itself is only asked to furnish about one fourth of the funds necessary for operation. It is very seldom that a tag day is worth while, and at times, when they come in rapid succession in a man- ner with which all school teachers are familiar, they become a positive menace. It has never been the prac- tice of the University authorities to allow this practice to exist unlicensed on this campus, and as a result Mich- igan has been most happily free from the pestilent kind of tag days. There will not be more than one or two allowed here this summer There will not be any other tag day on the University campus for the sup- port of an activity which is so es- sentially a part of the University, as the anntal Fresh Air Camp under the auspices of the Student Chris- tian Association. It is essentially a University project, conceived by University men and operated by students from the school who are sacrificing their time at pactically no monetary return for the cause which the camp represents. This year more than 350 under- privileged boys from large cities will be given free of charge the twelve days outing at the camp. Two see- tions have already been held, and the third commences this week. These boys are given what is for many of them the first opportunity to live out of doors, away from the grimy poorer sections of our indus- trial communities. They are chosen by responsible civic agencies in each of the towns represented, and would not otherwise receive any vacation at all. They are in the formative periods of their lives, between the ages of ten and sixteen. To many of them the contacts at the camp are their first opportunities to known univers- ity students, aid their first chance to get acquainted with the facts about a great university. To some of them it will be a turning point that will alter the course of a whole lifetime, and to those who never receive any inspira- tional effect at all the chance :to live n the open is invaluable as a health- ful measure. The responsibility . of the under- privileged children of the state is, to, be sure, not a responsibility of thel Michigan student body. It is a re- sponsibility of the industrial system which causes these conditions andi which is the basis of the poverty that affords a lack of opportunity. It is a responsibility of all society through its government, but it is a responsibil- ity which society as a whole is reluct- ant to accept, just as it is reluctant, to accept the actions of its individ-f uals as a social responsibility att times. Until the government or some1 regularly constituted agency takes, up this work, however, it must be done, and there is no more fittingt place for it to rest than upon the en- ligtened classes as represented in the state university. To be sure, certain generous individuals contribute ann- ually toward the camp more than twice what the whole student body gives, but it is a chance, nevertheless,[ for the students of Michigan to as-i sume a responsibility which can not but be of lasting benefit to society as a whole. The opportunity to serve the youth of the state, and society in general, is unparalleled. The influence that 350 boys can have on the future of our is both awful and inspiring. The boys at the camp cost less than one dollar for maintenance and supervis- ion. It is a small investment indeed for us to -make in our boyhood, andJ it is in all probability the only time this summery that there will be a tag day on the University campus-it is at least the last time that The Daily will support one (barring earth- quakes). MusicN ADrma JAZZ-IT IS A DREAD DISEASE Jazz, which s so often called by those untutored minds, "music" has received another set-back. This time it comes from Dr. Gustav Strese- -mann, Germany's foreign minister, speaking at the opening of the Frank- fort Music Exposition. "We must protect our nerves against this drum- fire and seek again that solemn hour of communion from which has come all the greatness ever created," said Dr. Stresemann. J mann nor any other diciple of what Musical Digest reassured the worried foreign minister that jazz was being relegated to its proper inconsequen- tial position in the July number of that magazine. "Neither Dr. Strese- mann nor any other deciple of what is truly representative of the art need 4Till, U S E S SKILLED REPAIRING y the Toiler"- Now at the Arcade ROYAL TYPEWRITERS RI er's Pen Shop t 315 State Street Ann Arbor Headquarters for ROYALS QUICK SERVICE IFI TTHE MOVIE TRUST ENCOUNTERS fear that jazz will more than tempor- STORMY SEAS. arily intrude where it does not be- Probably by now Messrs. Zukr, long," he said. Lasky, etc., are bemoaning the fact that they ever entered the movie LINDBEA DID NOT HELP THE business. First they try to cut costs of the movie actors' salaries, then It has been rumored that when the actors rebel; finally the United the band marched in the New York States government enters the scene parade honoring Lindbergh, there with an act to the effect that then were several particularly painful sour movie industry is violating several notes heard. The kind hearted gos- movi inustr isvioatin seera sip who told us about it said that it laws forbidding monopoly and unfairr S t old usbe bnt it saihusasmit competition, and as a result the next must have been their enthusiasm for federal the flyer that affected them-that he scene' will no doubt open iaferaI didn't stimulate the instrumentalists court with the, producers playing the Idn'tisticuhets-butreted part of the persecuted heroes. to artistic heights-but we rejected From the standpoint of the public the latter as an unforgivable pun. the effect of the movie industry forW several years has been that of a virt- Lovers of pianoforte music and Jual monopoly. The decreasing cost Iworshippers at the Paderewski shrine of distribution resulting from combin- will welcome joyfully the news that ation has brought most of ourmovie the Polish musician and statesman aous brgh mstaof ont move has decided to play recitals for four hues, large and small, into some mnh in this country beginning form of co-operative system if notmonths under the same ownership. This vi- January next. cinzity of Michigan has suffered, as He is now finishing up his Austral- has a4 large portion of the remainder inadNwZaadtuny n an 'and New Zealand tourneys and ha Nth re ort, nd o bth e remainder- in another few weeks will be at his I of the country, and combines power- Ps olshmrsigi h ful enough to control distribution Paso Robles home, resting in the have arisen coordinately in the movie1 California sunshine prior to his jaunt industry itself, until even the largest whence he sailsein August or f the independent showmen have ; Switzerland home. had to submit. trd . The only regrettable side of the sit- uation from the standpoint of the A Review. public has been the extortionate This is an entertainment which prices which these combinations most Daily readers will be able to were able to charge. When one syn- appriate only through the review. dicate owns every reputable theater p Few indeed are those who have the in the vicinity it can charge and ex- privilege of listening hour after hour, hibit practically what it pleases and and day after day, to the big horns get away with it. This is not the and little horns, and bassoons and worst of the situation, however, fors in many cases the theaters have fall- saxaphones and trombones and so on and on and on-that toot and wheeze en into the same hands that produce next door to the press building, in the pictures, and the result is a mon- the School of Music studios. For opoly that is all powerful from the which the bereft should fold their raw celluloid to the completed show- hands in silent thankfulness. ing on the metropolitan screen. Approaching the subject from the At times, according to the allega- established standpoint of open-minded tions of the government indictments, appreciation, the critic is tolerant, the movie producers have formed very tolerant and placidly ignores the combinations of pictures, and forced performance on the grounds that even ! the men showing them in the smaller though the present riot is unbearable towns to take the whole group, or to sensitive pierves, still, someday- none at all. In this way they were and so on. able to market the actually medicore From the scientific standpoint of and poor product by a type of sales- honest description, the "ho-ho" and manship that borders closely ,on in- "oh-oh" and bum-bum" of the various timidation, and if proved, this prac- band instruments is anything but tice should and can be stopped forth- coisonance, particularly as the big with, horn and the little horn and the trom- America as a whole is paying too bone and the saxaphone are all rum- much for its entertainment, and the tumming and tooting simultaneously movie industry is only one phase of from different vantage points being the hysteria that has gripped the separated from each other by kind whole nation. An unusual prosperity, partitions but all pouring forth their accompanied by a marked degree of erstwhile embryonic notes of Music spare time, has made the seeking of (!) through the windows into the of- diversion inevitable, and in quanti- fices of Ye Presse. ties never before approached. The And that is that-the opening dissolution of the . old family circle strains of "My Country 'Tis of Thee" with its neighborly visits, 'and the floating out of one window while the disappearance of the corner saloon closing bars of "Onward Christian with its card games and loafers has, Soldier" came out through another. accentuated this condition, and while The affect-but we have promised to neither of these losses are serious, keep this column sympathetic and they have caused a competition in tolerant. seeking amusement and diversion that has raised prices all the way from DEEMS TAYLOR AS DOCTOR the suburban movie palace to the in- Deems Taylor, composer of the mu- tercollegiate football stadium, sic for "The King's Henchman" at- The public, however, must be pro- tracted so much attention that New tected and it is high time that the York University honored him with' public did something about the con- a degree along with other celebrities, dition. After' all the professional none of whom was a musician. M. Taylor is now working on a entertainers, especially of the lower second opera for the Metropolitan order, such as movie actors and ac- Opera Company, the subjet of which tresses, are not iireproducible and still remains a mystery. One thing there is no use for paying them a seems certain from a few remarks higher salary than the man who runs dropped by the composer-that the a great business, or who has spent second libretto will not be a verse years of his life preparing for a pro- production by Edna St. Vincent Mil- fession. The business of movie act- lay. As time passes there is a grow- ing requires no particular abilities ing feeling that "The King's Hench- above normal and average, except man" is after all a rather ordinary that intelligence is probably a handi- book.{ cap and that one must have apollo' like features-a gift of nature, not ing their professional movie actors acquired. 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