r4 ;I . a I ..; - - ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. SUN1AY, JANUARY 29, 1922 .4 DER BLUE BOOK L) 0 y A Ivaits Junior. Hop F - A 0im .0 P t SCENARIOS FOR UNIVERSITY MOVIE DUE WEDNESDAY; FILMING WILL BE STARTED WHEN SELECTION IS MADE Wave O Sadni A nd Qoom Ho 4C ampusInC WEARY PROCESSION OF HUMBLE VICTIMS OF PLAG1 SACRIFICES TO IMMORTALS FOR DELIVERAN FROM OPPRE SSIVE RULE 1aste Lxamns PLAN ec. 38 or that poll. si. d pleasure, has been ut- rd to the greatest of its e place Friday evening, After the absence of a and honored place in ises to be one of the most Scenarios for the University movie to be produced here during the coming year must be turned in to the oflice of The Daily before the closing of the conteat, at 6 o'clock next Wednesday night. No plots will be received after that time, as immediate action must be begun to insure the production pf the finished film within the contracttd time. C, The plots will be turned over to the judging committee Wednesday night, to allow careful consideration of all sub- Initted. It is-hoped that a decision can be announced on the reopening of school at the beginning of the second se- mester. The representative of the producers who has been here to assist students in the construction of their plots will be in Ann Arbor tomorrow and Tuesday, with office hours from,2 to 4 o'clock in the reading rooms of the Press build- ing. Final consultation on stories already worked out will be possible at these times. Work will be started on+ the actual filming of the pic- ture as soon as a scenario is selected. A complete produc- tion unit will probably be moved to Ann Arbor and prior to the selection of a cast from among the students a number of local color scenes will be taken in the vicinity of Ann Ar- bor.' A few have already been filmed by men from the pro- ducing company, especially at the time of football games last fall. Russia Is Key To World Peace Problem, Says Sir Phillip G ibb O0 Blue Book! What crimes are committed in thy m of anguish hast thou caused, what sleepless nights and have been spent on thy account! More feared art thou lowance; yea, verily, give me rather a year of eight o'cl Blue Book! Ann Arbor is in mourning. For many days dark, su been shrouding the heavens; a mist of gloom and sadn earth. Dismal mortals wring their hands in despair, ple for relief from the dreaded scourge which is threatenin noble sacrifices to appease the wrath of the immortal on MUSICAL PROGRAM a crowd just large EDUCAAI ION ill hang I nd, with as they irow off ven Iris GET ONE SITY IN SPITE OF UNIVER- IS SUGGESTED BY WRITER ;esting is the recent ayow- WORLD FAMOUS VIOLINIST PLAYS HERE FEBRU. ARY3 Most noteworthy among the musical events of the examination period is thei concert by Erika Morini, the celebrat- ed Galacian violinist, at 8 o'clock Fri- day evening, Feb. 3, on the Choral Union series. Two other events will be the organ recital by Dwight Steere of St. Johns at 4:15 o'clocki Thursday, Feb. 2, and the faculty concert at 4:15 o'clock Sunday, Feb. ML gods hear not, or if they not to answer - they ha that joy and happiness sha ished. from the earth, and lowly humans who inhabit visited, with the terrible, idangerous Blue Book Blues word of the gods is law! And so the humble, wre dent resigns himself to hii prays that the plague may him. He garbs himself in black from head to foot -a spirit, e fords to Books he , I nedy's 10 corroborates the professor of ruetoric. Ann Arbor "Verily a paradox! Quick, my class g ,the first record!" A paradox indeed, on the are to play surface, but under the surface, where Wolverine only a few, pearl divers ever venture and War- :n thin superficial, not so incogruous also play. after all. events of Now Merely "Courses" g planned A young man recently made the and house startling discovery that the University t of their had a library, which might conceivably n far and be useful for other than social purpos- es. He concluded at about the same Mimes of, time that he was really not studying at a special all,that he was running a race with* for Two," his constitutional resistancce, trying 11 be pre- how many courses he could take and urday aft- how many activities he could be iden- rformance tified with without suffering a nervous ho will at- breakdown. He' got out his crystal has been spherd and his ink spot and took a ets. How- squint at the future, and noted with n priority interest that after he had received his he general degree he would be able 'to say, con-; iority will ceding him a good memory, that he had taken certain courses, for each of will be by which he received, four, three, or two everyone, hours credit, nothing more. ;etherymay The young man began to bring into the entire play old nervous connections, long in same time. disuse. He commenced to think. And the trend of his thought waa always monotonously thetsame: "What shall have been it profit a man if he gain a Phi Beta ersity o - Kappa key, and miss the purpose of d promin- his four years at college?" The idea whom have became an obsession, till one morning d intention as the clock was striking 3:15 o'clock it became unbearable, and leaping to med along his feet with a heart-rending shriek cing space he exclaimed, "By,, Wenley, I will do s will be it! No university in the United States be a sufft- shall prevent me! I, want an educa- acommon tion and I'm going to have it! They for them. shan't keep it from me." at no fra- The subsequent records reveal that ia will be the young man who commenced .to this would think, thereupon brazenly elected 12 rat deoora- hours of work, and in the time saved, . may be dissipated at the bar of decurriculized erior deco- knowledge, drinkiig deep of philos- ophy, biology, and literature, music will take and the drama, with fourth dimensions k Thursday for an occasional chaser., infornation All Couldn't Do It The selec- It is a serious fact that many stu- d drawing. dents come to Michigan and other, large universities with the avowed in- tention of becoming educated along a AY very well-defined line other than bus- iness administration, and on becoming ing this acclimated to the superheated campus 11 sus- atmosphere become so utterly lost in eb. 14 on the endless whirl of things that they ons. fail in large measure to accomplish that for which they came. They are deluded into the belief that the key to heaven, inscribed with three Greek letters, is to be gained by beginning at once to elect the greatest possible + number of hours: that education is pictures sreved in courses, like a meal, and baseball the greater the number of courses the get in I more aristocratic the dinner. As a er, 1519. i consequence at the end of their senior "R1ssia is the key to the problem of world peace," asserted Sir Philip "ibbs, famous London correspondent n jis address, "What I Saw in Rus- sia," relivered last. night at Hill aud- tnrium. After touching briefly on the causes 3f the faminfiN 'Russia, the speaker described the conditions now existing in Russia in the villages and in the gre;.t- cities such as Moscow, which he said are but empty shel:s where the only sign of activity is the beggars asking alms. "Lenine has made public confession of the complete failure of commun- ism," stated Sir Gibbs, "in the speech in which he said 'We have suffered a terrible defeat. The only thing that can save Russia. is the establishment of a new economic law.-" This new economic law is, accordtng 'o Sir GIbbs, merely a return to the old economic law. "Lenine and hisl fellows are realists as well as ideal-1 allowed to express their opinions and have some voice in the government ists, ,and they are now facing terrific realities," he said. He went on to say that if the Soviet government were approached by four or five great European powers, to- gether with the United States, it would be willing to meet almost any conditions imposed in return for the aid which Russia so = desperately needs. "Is is easy to formulate the condi- tions upon which we would be willing to help," continued Sir Gibbs. "First, the demobilization of the Red army, to be followed by the demobilization of the Polish army, for France is the ally of Poland and so long as the Red and Polish armies stan4 in arms there can lie no peace in Europe. Sec- ond, the cessation of revolutionary propaganda. Third, that there should be a more democratic basis of Rus- sian government; that men should be by which they are controlled." Morini a. Great Artist I way is I Erika Marini has been pronounced IIHot tear. the world's most famous woman vio-I pauses o linist and critics add that she is prob- his fellov ab:y the greatest woman violinist thai. ever lived. About five years ago Miss "0, br Morini made her debut with Arthur reaching Mikisch, playing the Mozart A ma- have we jor concerto. The astonished con- that suec ductor summed up her achievement in us!" the epigram, "She is not a wonder "The tr child, she is a wonder." She was then I falls fror ch lJnim MANY CORES TO BE TAUGHT DURING SUMMERl 1NNOUNCEMENT OUT SOON, WILL AID IN SECOND SEIESTER ELECTIONS Complete information as to courses for the Summer session of 1922 5will be available for all students who ex- pect to continue their study during tha period when.the special prelim- inary announcement of the Summer session is placed on distribution Wed- nesday, Feb. 1. The announcement will enable students to plan their work for the second semester with a view' to co-ordinating it with thb course of summer study,. Hahn, trainer; and E. E. W:eman, as- sistant football coach. The work of these men will be supplemented by special lectures by men from outside the University. (Contiued on Page Three) DAILY WILL PUBLISH TWO SPECIAL J-HOP EDITIONS 11 years old. She was born in Vienna something less than 17 years ago, coming from Italian stock. During the war sht played at many concerts In Ceitral Europe, and after the armistice she was the first artist to tour Roumania and Poland. She was engaed for an American tour by F. C. Coppicus of the Metropolitan Musical bureau in the winter of 1921, making her debut in Carnegie hall during that season. Her triumph was so great that she was able to give four New York re- 2*ta's in the next five weeks. At each -f these she played an entirely differ- ent program, an unparalleled feat in every way. Crities Puzzled Critics in Europe and America, while astonished at her feats of mem- ory and technique, were entire1y at a loss to accouat for her youthful mas-I tery and her sympathetic under- standing of the most d'fficult compo- sitions. Professor Sevcik, the noted violin teacher, with whom she studied for a time, is quoted as saying .of her power of the bow, "I cannot teach her anything. It is as though the personality of the composer whose work she plays is living in her and expressing himself through her." Her program follows: Concerto. minor ...........Bruch Allegro moderatow Adagio Allegro energico Praeludium and Allegro........ ....... Pugnani-Kreisler Menuett .....................Mozart Romance Andalouse.........Sarasatel blue books. Hot dog! 'but they' tough on us this year, what we It wouldn't ge so bad If they a' in one day, but two weeks - buddy, we've,. been dreaming thinking blue books so much we've been pouring quarts 'o for the last few weeks, and nov got blue rings under our eyes And they fall in behind their er mourner (looks like a Gre tiation) and form into line, wil books lightly clutched in thei wands and their left hands s graspng the copies of the blu Gchedules with which the gre covered. It has been rainini books all day - local colo might say. In lock-step formal 1strange procession, chanting ti song, moves down State stref weird. plaintive cry reaches brary and penetrates the book so that those within hear an out to ioin the weeping march so swell the ranks of blue-bo ferers. Offer Ceremouials Ten thousand strong, they Sleepy Hollow and there seal selves about a huge fire, who$ ing flames reach.nigh unto the at least half that high, any and cast an air of glamor e mance over the assemblage. them, whose sackcloth and hood (or is it a toque?) disi h'm as a high priest, advance fire, and after bowing three t j the flames and then to the cc In the past the abridged announce- E ment contained only a brief outline of the work for the summer which in' many cases was, found inadequate as a guide to planning second semester courses. This year the announcement contains full details as to the nature, of the courses, the class hours, and' he instructors and professors in charge, so that it will be possible for any student to arrange his summer schedule at this time. Copies of the announcement will be available at the Registrar's offie, the Graduate school offlce, the School of Education, and the Library.f Work in practically all the depart- ments will be expanded with addition- al courses by regular faculty men and visiting professors.' One feature of outstanding importance is the Coach- ing school which is to be conducted for the first time here during the Summer session. The work will be under the supervision of Coach Field- ing H. Yost, director of intercollegiate athletics. He is to be assisted by the entire ennelhing staff of the Univer- sity, including Ray L. Fisher, base- ball coach; S. J. Farrell. track coach; E. J. Mather, basketball coach; Archie The Daily will publish two Junior Hop extra editions. The papers will be devotgd exclusively to the event. The first extra will appear at mid- night and will be distributed at the gymnasium where the social event is in order. The second edition, more comp'ete and containing a picture o° the grand march, will appear on the streets at 6 o'clock the following morning. Only a limited number of the secondl edition will be available. Fraternity houses will be cal'ed and reservations for copies of this editian should be made at this time. Reservations may! also be made any time next week at The Daily office.' The price of the extras will be 10 cents. NOTICE TO CAMPUS AND RE. I LIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS 1 In order to improve the gener- I al appearance of The Daily it. i seems desirable to discontinue I the use of page one for display I advertising. Accordingly, the front page ribbon. hitherto sold only to campus and religious or- I ganiations. will be no longer I available. herinnine Peb. 14. VERNON F HTTLrRY. I Business Manager. r ,'I Canzonetta+..............Godard "" ai Va'se Caprice ...........Wieniawski ao esa Moses Fantasie...........Paganiniatchig a (Variations on G string) the powers Mr. Emanuel Balaban at the piano from the p ' "Lands s Mr. Steere, who will give the organ aContin recital on Thursday, is an advanced student under Earl V. Moore. The results of his work on the organ are fast winning him recognition. WIR His program will be as follows: F'antasie.................Dubois Thp ad Processional..............Duboish t Fugue, E minor ("The Wedge") t idint h ........... .............. Bach ' in b,, Pastorale, Op. 26 ...........Guilmant'i editorial March on a Theme of Handel.... for the vi ....-,.:.. -- ------- Guilmantj' tinn eap The twilight recital on the Sunday ' and Pver after examinations will feature as 1 zivPn fuil guest soloist Mrs. George Hastreiter, ' lePo of el soprano. Other artists will be Sm- nliant, nel Pierson Lockwood. violinist. Mrs. qhollld al Maud Okkelherg. pianist, and Marian l tn+ Rtrnble, violinist. a'' of whom areI n mphers of the School of Music fac- Lke. ain't we Hued on Page ' TMI S' TRTI itors of Whii to reeive ir( Imany mami ndv who are inz eandidnto ataff of the Par 1922-21 T to ha filled 1 v aplieation 1 enn ideratii Inca or school All persona rnlv by mail. nWVhimsies P ra F'a'rnarv 1 the shout- al captains --lva% t