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November 24, 1925 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1925-11-24

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4

1Ac1 r1-rocT

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

'AtTESDAY. XOVPVlRRR. 24- 1.4M

TI-IFMTCI-TCAMy mil

lC*~Sv J4~lt±SSrJSA 4'±,I ZILO.

3

article was a little weak on his facts,
especially as regards the council's dis-
ciplinary powers. He evidently does
Publshed every morning except Monday not know that the only cases of stu-
duringr the University year by the Board in
Control of Student Publications, dent discipline that are referred to the
- council are those which the president
emnbers of Western Conference Editorialoftecnilth carmnote
Associationof the council, the chairman he
Senate committee on Student Affairs,
The Associated Press is exclusively en- and the dean of students hove decided,
it l to the use for republication of all news
d'rces red'ited to it or not otherwise or may dlecide as they arise, mig;ht
rdiedinis paper and the local newsr ub-best be administered (irectly by the
nl.herein,
Senate committee on Student Affairs,
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, and that three members of the council
ichan, as second class matter. Special ratey
i ostae granted by Third Assistant Post- are members of the Senate committee.
ma-r General.Ah
Subscrition' by carrier, $3.50; by mail, And the author does not realze that
64.0. in the majority of eases the Senate
Ofie:tA.nn Arbor Press Building, May- committee has accepted the recom-
na trcet,
hones; Editorial, 4925; business, 21214. mendations of the council as to dis-
ciplinary measures.
EDITORIAL STAFF But why go on? Of course there are
Telephone 4925 faults, riany of them, in the structure
of the council,--faults which only
MANAGING EDITOR time and support can wipe out. And
GEORGE W. DAVIS on the other hand, the council has ac-
complished a few praiseworthy things
C:' ;....:,n, Editorial Board..Norman R. Thal ..
Cy Edior............Robert S. Mansfield this year, especially its logical and
I Wens Editor............Helen S. Ramsay understandable system of checks on
5 rsditor.............Joseph Kruger\ the class treasurers.
1el'1rafjh Editor........William Waithour
lu;<ic and Drama......Robert B Henderson The student council may never have
Night Editors amounted to much, and may not now
Smh IT. Cady Lenard C. Hall amount to much, it is all a matter of
Wiard B. Crosby Thomas V. Koykka
obert T. DeVore W. Calvin Patterson personal opinion, but there is no good
Assistant City Editors reason why any constructive minded
Trwin Olian Frederick H. Shillito being should give up all hope for the
Assi stants future. The council has otentialities,
Ws iliameyr.eBarbourttanford N. Phelps and with the support of the campus
( nzer Ivelyn Pratt .,

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MUSC
THE AND
4-m-e ROLL
Being unable to attend the per- "SAINT JOAN
formance at the Whitney last night,
we are still wonder whether Miss A review, by Robert Ramsay.
Arthur did this new dance of hers. London watches a syncopated ver-
As advertised on the front page of sion of Shakespeare and the heavy
The Daily Sunday Miss Arthur was pulse of the lethargic Britain is not
stirred by the sight of Hamlet in
scheduled to introduce a new dance
which, it is said, tyill put the Charles- knickers; a Calvinist parson pictures
the Saviour in fighting togs in an at-
ton out of business for life. It is tempt to draw a shadowy connection
known as the Title Roll the name be- between athletics and religion, with
ing a corruption of Tidal Roll the more care for publicity than correct
origin of the dance being Hawaiian. dogma. So it is hardly a surprise
(They have an ocean somewhere near when Bernard Shaw, always the en-
there and the wave motion of the fant terrible of English letters con-
water suggested it.) ceives the cannonized Maid of Orleans
Although Miss Arthur is a little old as a hoydenish miss whose unman-
for this sort of thing, we expect it was nerly spirit finds its expression in her
love of fighting, and is best illustrated
a great success. Its queer that we
, by the flippancy with which she wd-
neevr remembered there being any dresses "Charlie," the snivelling
dance numbers in Mr. Shaw's play, as Dauphin of France.
presented in New York a short while It is this unconquerable love of
ago. It d(os sound Shavian, though, horse play which strains even the ad-
this introduction, of a dance number miration of Shaw's most robust ad-
for this play on the road so as to at- mirers; those who take up the cudgels
tract larger Louses. Pretty nice satire most vigorously in his behalf must
too wer hksradmit that he runs a very real danger
* *et*.in his exessive use of scathing satire.
In his devotion to satire, he almost
EXCUSE US, MISS DIX fails to allow the development of the
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We Mrill allow you $1.00 for your old fountain pen on the purchase
of a new pen of any of the following makes:

PARKER
WATERMAN

SHEAFFER
CONKLIN

At Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk.

w

SKILLED REPAIRING

If all fountain pens were

the repair men would starve to death.
One pen for a lifetime, with writing quali-
ties and ink capacity unepualled.

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7ilia ire3 er Marie Reed
lhm C. Brooks Simon Rosenbaum
I,. Buckinshans Ruth Rosenthal
E l-r Carter Wilton A. Simpson

Ca I ton Ctamp
s fene II. Gutekunst
noug-as Doubleday
Mry Dunnigan
es T. Herald
zn"iiaeth S. Kennedy
:ion Kubik
wt er H. Mack
s R Markus
Eis Nerry
hlen Mo"irrow

Janet Sinclair
Courtlarr3 C. Smith
Stanley Steinko
Clarissa Tapson
Henry Tburnau
1)avid C. Voles
Chandler J. Whipple
Cassam A. Wilson
Thomas C. Winter
Marguerite Zilszke

IBUSINESS STAFF
Tlephone 21214
BUSINESS MANAGEF
BYRON W. PARKERI
......... ..J. J. Finn
S........ I). Olmsted, Jr.
A ,rt .............Frank R. Dentz, Jr.
Advert u ..................Wmn. L. Mullin
( iu io.................... L: Newman
nUaton...............Rudolph Bostelman
Accounts....................Paul W. Arnold
Assistantsj
~ngred . Av ing F. A. Nordquist
i. An.,!le, Jr. Loleta t. Parker
MV. Carl i ie Julius C. Pliskow
John 1. SobriAk Robert Prentiss
!V . Cc x Win. C. Pusch
ari ,n DA1aniel Franklin J. Rauner
i.s IR e ('y Joseph Ryan
hrgar.t L. Funk Margaret Smith
SMar (ilbert Mance Solomon.
T. Kenneth aven Thomas Sunderland
. E. Little Wni. J. Weinman
]Frank E. Mogber _________
T "y)AY, NOVEMBER 24, 1925
Nmt lditor,- . C. PATTERSON
OITT OU WANT IT?
Everybody likes to be "agin" some-
thing or other, it gives you something
to ta"k about, something to "get cff
our chest." People who write for
college publications surely are not
exceptions to this rule,-we are not,
]nd neither are the "copy-producers"
o, our companion of a Sunday, Chimes.
This "I'm agin it" spirit was espe-
cially evident in the article in the, lat-
est Chimes entitled "Is It Student
Government? The Daily is not a'
great worshipper of the Student coun-
cil, The Daily finds nothing to emulate
in the ways of these "student leaders,"
but The Daly does object when the
council is wrongfully criticized. The
author of the article finds many
.aults, perhaps real one, in the or-
:nization of the council, but he
ma _es no su::gestions for remedying
the atuation; he points out several
n k ith1-

they can and will be developed. Some peoples minds take peculiar mt anign1jy tilaisin Joan to
twists. For example we just found a prepare for her glorious defiance in
i-- tletter to this department askingwhyithe end. Joan of the first act is a
a woman shuts her eyes while being peasant girl whose words are inspired
In an effort to encourage a ig a w.a only by her own imprudence. It is
hissed. That is about like writing the
standard of scholarship among those , only until she comes into the presence
working on student publications, the a's office to fnd out what the best of the Dauphin and the Archbishop of
Board in Control, sometime before the way to crib is. Rheims that one senses the deep re-
.n l t oIt is, incidentally about the worst ligious power that comes to her from1
istms holidys, will a t e slam we have received thus far. Of the voices that inspire her, and one I
gifts, totaling $500, to the three stu- course we did run a Dorothy Trix begins to understand the indomitable
dents who during four semesters of column once, but really, kind readers spirit that carried her through the
work, or more, have maintained the t-at vas supposed to be satire on fire prescribed by the lords of the'
highest scholastic aveiage among . church and the temporal -powers still
. . Dorothy Dix. We really know very
those engaged in publications work. lthe determined champion of protes-i
The award is made annually by t ittle of such matters. We certainly tantism and nationalism.
hope, further more, that our general Sh's Jo
board, with two deinite objectives in trend of conducting this departmentI until the tremendous trial scene- j
view. I is the desire of tie board, has not been such that the average then, all the weakness that is woman-1
first, to stimulate an interest on the reader is lead to suppose that we are ! ly, and all the indomitable courage;
part of staff members in matters pure- an authority on such subjects. 1 and inspiring trust that is woman's
ly academic; and second, to eucour- Nevertheless, as a purely psycho- make her a figure which though her
age the student of a distincly scholar- inter- own century destroyed her, four cen
I logical problem, this question iter-
ly turn of mind to engage in pubica- su turies have rendered her name unfor-
tions work. Both objeIrv;s are indeed gettable.
worthwhile. Too fbeen.dy meers It is one of the greatest plays which
of thevais e uaions staffs so Well, the most obvious answer is this remarkably keen mind has pro-
lose themselves intlctir work that that all women don't, we know this duced. If he has made it a catch all
their academic pu ruits tare bligh ed, oureiy from hearsay, of course, but it for his philosophy,-if portions of it
isour definite belief that there are 'are marred by his insistent buffoonery,
at least pa rtially. ! t is by placing a
largu numbers of women all over the -if moments of it drag somewhat,
premiummupon chorsmip that the !still it must certainly stand as the
board hopes to combat this tendency country who don't close their eyes great dramatic achievement of this
when being kissed.
on the part of students to nmaintain I century. While one may differ with
only a sufliciently high schholsti T1hen there is another large group him in his conception of Joan, and
standard to remnaim eligible for extr- ou hici nothing can be said one way might wish that he had made her more
curricular activities. ior the other, chiefly because they have of a woman, one cannot but stand
rnever been given an opportunity to mute before his dra matic power; 'rnd
edstuenty, discouraged sroms nIi determine on which side of the fence the noble simplicity of his soldier
-ed student is discoura 1difr'm tat11?n
tiley stsand. maid.
part in the work of stuent p.blica-s t tt s do He is guilty of a tremendous breach
tions, because of the great ro and some don't, perhaps the key to the in a totally unnecessary and needless-
which such activities make upon his aply violent epilogue. It is perhaps oneI
tieI i oec.r explanation of the reason why those
time It is to encourage students of of the most biting and devastating bits
this ,type to shar& in increasing nun- that do, do lies in the man who is doing of satire that he has produced. He
hers in the benefits wrhich p~ublit ions the hissing (supposing always that steps down from the stage at the endt
work offers ir the form of new con- this deals only with kisses from men of a powerful scene and roundly be-
acts, new interests, and nev, experi- to women). We might go even further rates the audience for having allowed
a e and say sthat it depends upon certain themselves to be stirred by the tra-
ences that te hoard makes c ye facial characteristics of the men. gedy of Joan of Arc; it is more-it is
this outlay of $500. For example, assuming that the (Continued on Page Eight)
The award, which in many respects I ao a d
. . Hunchback of . .otre Dame and Rich-
is indeed generous, is a testimonial of mh THE DETROIT SYMPhONY
the board's deep concern that studentsaBantheitess kissed the same num-
taki.n part in activities under its ber of women annually, it seems A review, by Gwladys Evans.
logical to assume that in the Hunch- This orchestra evidently spcializes
supervision should keep constantly back's case the percentage of closed- in string music. At any rate the most
.before them a scholarly objective If'ynoticeable characteristics of its per-
in its operation, the plan is as success- eyed kisses would far exceed the formance last night was the variety
ful as even the most modest predic- wide-eyed-ones, and conversely in Mr. and strength of its stringed instru-
tions would indicate, it should inspire Barthemness'. We believe we have ments, and the unobstrusiveness of
in student staff members a zeal for made that point clear. the brass instruments. We may coin-
intellectual attainment, and spur on to Of course the-re may be other ex- pliment the orchestra on its artistic
greater scholastic effort the several planations which may lay just as good performance, and on its program the
ha claim to the proper solution as our nature of which was admirably suited
hundred students whto are now en-;totaofhercsr.Teopng
..theory. We make no boast about it. to that of the orchestra. The opening
'rolled on the staffs of the various jwas adeaimronriatelyb hpr n
time made L- appopiaeJ bJ th

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M iA KT;'SELL
MAN N'S . JcT.

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FACTORY MADE
Means Skill and Quality
in Our Shop.
Save a Dollar or More at the
FACTORY HAT STOREr
617 Packard Street. Phone 7415.
(Whrte D1I. U. R. Steps at State St.)

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LADIES WORK A
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It E P A I R I N G

Round
Frequent Service
MICHI-A

WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED

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PL EASE
DON'T
MAK E
PA THSE

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A Thanksgiving Special
Wednesday night, this week, since there are no
classes on Thursday, we are giving a dance from
9-1. Whether you are going home over Thursday
or not, you ougnt to stop in and enjoy the dance for
a while. Music as usual by Jack Scott and his 10-
piece Club Royal Orchestra.
Dancing 9 - 1

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a ns sin rie present plan, Dut
11eA ~ J k ~ ~ i L P t ~ ~ U L c a m p u s p u b lic a tio n s .,
he does not correlate them with the _ams_________s.
iowers and support which are vestedA
in tIe hoy in question. LEADERS OF THlE FUE1 '
Cramted that the council is not as At no time in time history of our
powerful and influential a , body as country has youth been more assertivei
1ight be desired, can the situation be in its efforts to influene and shapej
improved by throwing up the hands national and international political I
and saying that undergraduate inter- policies than at the present time.t
eats are not and cannot be united? i American youth is at last followingt
Must undergraduate ouinion as to his British cousin, who has long beent
schohistic, athletic, and extra-curri- actively engaged in just such a pro-r
cular actities be united in order to grain. Under te auspices of a few 1
achieve a really successful council? l associated colleges an effort is underi
.st a mation, or state, or municipal- way to organize what is to be known
ity be solidhy united in interest in as the Nation-wide Collegiate confer-I
order to attain worthwhile govern- ence on the World court.
rment? In these activities there is not seen
At one point, the article under dis- any effort to dictate governmental
IMai n rays, "Can you imagine a policies or to override the authority of
council that would agree to put a fra- older men. It is purely an educational
ternty on probation without even -a Imovement. Its purpose is to crystal-
suggestion froi the dean, one that lize student opinion in this country on
wbuld agree on expelling a student i the World court and possibly to pre-
fir dishonesty kn exanmination or for, sent a resolution to the President.
immorality. With public opinion and Undoubtedly its most important pur-
tme att e of councilmen toward the pose is the inauguration of pn organi-h
-oI nil as Iy are iow this is un- zation whose purpose will be "tie for-o
J b e. Yt it must come if there nation of enlightened and militant
Sto le nah student self-government student opinion on all questions ofs
t cn ational and miternational import-
Stl is a condemnaton of the coun- ance."
cii? luoe this point out any great There is no secret motive here and
; in the student elected gov- no threatening movenient. Oil , tlie
S0nng body? Does it not, instead,i other hand, it is an indication that oar
(-Varly pc the responsibility for educated youths are willing to take
any dt enenes in the council on the 'responsibility and wish to take an s
studout body itself? The article ad- active part in th work of the nationti
mt that the present body is weak and of the world. It is a movement n

In conclusion we might quote the y V ver-
inonso e mg quote ture to Weber's opera Euryanthe, and
famous proverb k , was followed by the obviously out-
Ask Dad,lhe hknlow:' standing performance of the evening,
Beethoven's Emperor Concerto in II
The day Will Rogers appears here flat with Mr. Gabrilowitsch at the
we expect to. suspend publication. We piano. Then came a modern selection
cannot meet such competition face to of orchestral pieces: Liadov's "Kirki-
face. Mr. Rogers is unquestionable I more," Debussy, and Tschiakovsky for
the outstanding humorist in this coun-- the concluding item.
try today, both because of what heI In reviewing the performance it is
says toaydthwyeas ofwat.We dnatural to thimk first of Mr. Gabrilo-
says and the way he says it. We do witsch's excellent rendering of the
not mean to compare ourselves with ! Beethoven concerto. It demanded the
him in any way. This would be like greatest technical skill and Mn
eclipsing the Sun with a match. ( Gabrilowitsch did not disappoint us.
* * * I The first movement was full of caden-
LIMERICKS zas, arpeggios, and rapid modulations
XTIff from one scale to another either sim-
While walking in front of U hail ply er in thirds sixths or octavaves.
A young co-ed started to bawl Occasionally a snatch of melody re-
When asked what tie use was ieved the ear but it 'was not until the
Whenskd hatthxuse wassecond movment that we got the finest
She saitd her excuse was aand most haunting melody. The final
Her shoemaker Dad had lost awl. movement called for all the resources
-The Deacon's Cousin. I of a pianist, demanding acute artistic
* * * sentitiveness to the varying moods
Poor old Rollo had his face frozen and the widest possible range of tone
solid this morning, and we had to run production. Mr. Gabrilowitsch was
him all over Ann Arbor with a coat equal to the ordeal and charmed his
over it to warm him up again. Then audience with his beautiful touch. He
ove htoaim thim upagasin. Tohen played the softest airs lightly without
we gave him three quarts of alcoholi losimg fullness of tone, and displayed
straight-if that doesn't keep himn an equal mastery over the passages
warm, nothing will. He is some drink- of sounding chords and fullest har-
er that boy. mmony. It was the performance of an
* * * experienced artist.
SA1IT JO}ANThe orchestra too was equal to the
A Review, by Belhimda Treherne. demands of its delightfully varied pro-
Three years ago now the Michigan ! gram. Weber's overture was an excel-
imnmingteaml was allowed to prac- lent means of preparing the audience
sice in the Y. M. C. A. pool every after- musically to receive the' more sternly
icen tme C A. pool em-y a- classical production of Beethoven. I
iinon for nothbing. theosims beinz I .r !.......- -_

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