PACE FOUR ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, DECE-MBAR 11, 20-25 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- f4tledto the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postagle granted by Third AssistantaPost- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business, 21214. ! , EDITOiiAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W. DAVIS Chairman, Editorial Board...Norman R. Thal City Editor............Robert S. Mansfield News Editor ........... Manning Houseworth Women's Editor ..........Helen S. Ramsay Sports Editor.............,.Joseph Kruger Telegraph Editor.........Wlim Wthu Music and Drama...Robert B, Henderson Night Editors Smith H. Cady Leonard C. Hall Willard B. Crosby Thomas V. Koykks Robert T. DeVore W. Calvin Patterson Assistant City Editos Irwin Olian Frederick H. Shillito Assistants Gertrude E. Bailey Helen Morrow William T. Barbour Margaret Parker Charles Behymer Stanford N. Phelps William Breyer Evelyn Pratt Philip C. Brooks Marie Reed 1 a. Buckingham Simon Rosenbaum Edgar Carter Ruth Rosenthal Carneton Champe Wilton A. Simpesn Eugene H. Gutekunst Janet Sinclair IDouglas Doubleday Courtland C. Smith Mary Dunnigan Stanley Steinkn~ ames T. Herald Clarissa Tapson .lizabeth S. Kennedy Henry Thurnau Mliles Kimball David C. Vokes Marion Kubik Chandler J. Whipple Walter H. iack Cassam A. Wilson Louis R. "Markus Thomas C. Winter Ellis Merry Marguerite Zilszke BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER BYRON W. PARKER Advertsng.................Joseph J. Finn Advertising............ ..T. D. Olmsted, Jr. Advertising.............frank R. Dentz, Jr. Advertising.................Wm. L. Mullin Circulation.. .......... L. Newman Publication..............Rudolph Bostehnan Accounts...................Paul W. Arnold Assistants Ingredi M. Alving F. A. Norquist Gebrge 11: Annable, Jr. Loleta G. Parker W. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow on 11. Bobrink Robert Prentiss W. J. Cox Wm. C. Pusch Mar olnA. Daniel Franklin J. Rauner A. Rolland Damin Joseph Ryan James R. DePuy Margaret Smith MNary' Flinttrman Mance Solomon Margaret L. Funk Thomas Sunderland Stan Gilbert Eugene Weinberg T. Kenneth Haven Wm. J. Weinman It. Nelson Sidney Wilson FI IDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1925 old haunts, and, it has been proven in a majority of cases, to their old crimes. And the final decision in such an important matter left to the gov- ernor of the state, who has plenty of4 other duties far more pressing than the investigation of individual cases of prisoners who desire to be paroled before the conclusion of their terms. Governor Groesbeck is not at fault- the task of supervising the state parole system was deposited on him by the legislature, and the old parole commission, which was functioning successfully, was abolished, leaving the matter squarely up to the execu- tive. It is beyond the faintest realm of possibility that the governor could have carefully investigated more than 7,000 parole cases during his term of service; to have accomplished such a task would have required all his time and left none for the perform- ance of the duties for which a gov- ernor is primarily elected. A trained man, permitted to devote all his time to careful consideration of particular cases, should be selected to head Michigan's pardon and parole system . He should serve as the head of a commission similar to that abolished by the legislature-and which should be held responsible- not the governor of the state. The reports and statistics of this commis- sion should always be open to the public, and not kept in a guarded se- clusion, as has so often been the case recently . And full reports of all cases in which a criminal has been paroled should be forwarded to the judge and prosecuting attorney most interested, a practice that has been allowed to fall into disuse by the present administration, according to various judges throughout the state. The universal condemnation of the present situation is well grounded in facts. Criticism will continue until popular resentment of the practice of dumping paroled criminals back on the state in wholesale lots reaches the point where it will force a reform. And that time should not be far dis- tant. THE LIMELIGHT The limelight sheds a pleasant warmth on those who perform be- neath its brilliance, but it is a danger- ous brilliance, that is too apt to burn the man who would live beneath its glare. The reward that it pays in dol- lars and cents is bought at the price of peace of mind that often is worth more than gold. The light is directed on those who are spectacular, and it brings with it the responsibility of remaining spec- tacular, of continually living up t the expectations of a public that is satisfied with nothing. It takes a strong man to continue to lead a calm existence when he occupies the center of a stage that is absorbing the interest of halfathe UnitedaStates and whose name appears daily in the largest streamers the newspapers use. The latest man to hold the center of the stage is a youngster from a small Illinois city who has developed the knack of running through a broken field with a football under his arm in a manner that is spectacular in the extreme. Perhaps Red Grange is not the greatest football player that ever lived, there is no doubt about his being the most interesting from the point of the spectator, and hence, of the box office. There have been Trun- ners who have gained more ground than Grange, but there never has been a man who could "run like Grange."' The spectacular has made Red Grange. They called him "the Phan- tom of the gridiron;" they wrote oft the "flaming, path" his red head cut through opposing teams; they likened him to a "meteor flashing over the chalk lines;" every word of the press reports added to the dramatic aura that surrounded the brow of the youthful star . There never has been an athlete press-agented like Red Grange, and it was all the gift of the newspapers. The cost of buying such newspaper prominence would run into millions of dollars. But the limelight is beginning to burn. Wednesday afternoon the Bears lost in Boston, and the mighty Grange did not gain with his customary matchless style-he was worn out after weeks of football and notoriety without a chance to rest or avoid the glare. That he has run so well thus far against the calibre of men who have made up the teams that have met the Bears is a tribute to his greatness. But wh n he failed-once-the fans jeered him as he left the field. Public opinion is nothing if not fickle. Others who have trod the path to glory that leads over the goal line may have envied Grange his unusual9 opportunity; now they may sympa- thize with him in his determination to; go on and give the public its money's worth when he is tired out-mentally and physically. The limelight is be-3 ginning to burn.: CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. Thevnames of communi- cants wil, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. IS NATIONALISM AN EVILI To the Editor: This query can well be put to the thinking mind today. It is not the nationalistic regime with its acom- panying spirit of patriotism-the\lat- ter too often smug self-sufficiency and the tool of bourgeois greed- shouting out loud its pitiful obso- lesence and inadequacy? Is it not entirely out of harmony with the over- powering complexity of modern civili- zation? Is it not inimical to world peace? Alfred Korzybski strikes a great note in the following quotation: "By virtue of the advancement that has been going on with ever accelerated logarithmic rapidity in" all the sci- ences and their practical applications, the social sciences excepted, our world, "once so seemingly vast, has virtually shrunken to dimensions of an ancient province; and manifold peoples of diverse tongues and tra- ditions and customs and institutions are now constrained to live together as in a single community. There is thus demanded a new ethical wisdom, a new legal wisdom, a new economic wisdom, a new political wisdom. For the new visions our anguished times cry aloud but the only answers are reverberated echos of the wailing cry mingled with the chattering voices of excited public men who know not what to do." And the explanations? "The siences of ethics and jurispru- dence and economics and politics and government have not kept pace with the rapid progress made in the other great affairs of man." Korzybski states that herein lies the reason for our social unrest and chaotic inter. national relations. And is he not right? Has not the post-war era been one demanding a new political enlightenment? Has no the light thrown of late upon the motives which actuated the leaders of the world powers in that stupendous conflict revealed the dastardly sordid- ness of the whole affair and bared the utter hopelessness of nationalism i a world now so complex as ours? The war most emphatically was not waged "to make the world safe for democ- racy." Nor was it staged to accom- plish any other idealistic ends ex- pressed in saccharine phraseology, We probe to the bottom and find the war's stimulus in an expansive na- tional consciousness (patriotism) ex- pressing itself in grasping national imperialism-the extension of na- tional domain, of trade supremacy, of national prestige and vain glory. Worst of all, these motives were known to corrupt leaders alone. The public was by insidious and hateful propaganda led into the belief that they were struggling and suffering martyrdom for an ideal. Our Presi- dent was probably one of the deluded idealists. War-wholesale slaughter -for such mean and low ends was one of the greatest crimes ever per- petrated. Nationalism becomes a hateful word. Well the writer realizes the possi- bly revolutionary tone of this expres- ,sion. But obviously it is by no means new. At any rate, it is not the duty of university students, ostensibly the in- telligentsia, to face such matters squarely-to probe deep, to reason fairly, and to strip sentiment and prejudice from the mind? There is nothing so great as a true intellectual freedom and independence. It is, in fact, the back-bone of the university, from which will emanate future pro- gress. Timidity and inertia and tra- dition shall not yoke us to the belief that because our present government is nationalistic therefore nationalism is the acme of perfection. Govern- ment operating in the interests of the people at large, for the greatest good, is the one we must have. If that gov- ernment be international in character, we must strive for it. G. T. W. Patrick affirms that "as higher levels of good are successively realized, the lower levels become evil." Thus while nationalism was a goal to be fought for and died for in the last three centuries, it no longer enjoys the status of a great good. Its archaic structure, its in- ability to cope with the present prob- lems, are only too manifest. It must be relegated to the past-to the limbo where all the other types of govern- ment have journeyed which have out- lived their usefulness. Again, in Patrick's words, "With ouTw idening social and economic interests, inter- nationalism represents a new value, so that a selfish nationalism becomes an evil." And as nationalism is essent- ially selfish, is not our course clear? The paeon of this decade should be a cry investing our hopes and efforts in the League of Nations as an initial step. From the maintenance of its integrity and an extension of its scope the world might very conceiva- I 1MUSIC DRAMA TONIGHT: The Whines present "Tambourine" In the Whitney theater at 8 o'clock. TONIGHT: Louis Graveure sings in Hill auditorium at 8 o'clock. * * . "TAMBOURINE" A review, by Robert Ramsay. There have always been two kinds of opera. One is the opera of last year, or the year before depending en- tirely upon the choice of the speaker, the other is this year's production, which is perenially the "opera differ- ( ent." So it has gone since operas were first invented; each production has been launched amid a verbiage of empty promises of new interests, new ideas, until the devotee tends to be- come aged and cynical waiting for that elusive something new. ' This year, for the first time in their word. They have ventured into un- explored realms and have presented the opera different, and it is the best thing that they have ever done. "Tambourine" must stand as surely at the beginning of a new era in operas as "Tickled to Death" marked the passing of the old. With it passed the bumpkin humor that contemplated nothing higher than a straw hat act center stage which delved searchingly into the archives of jokedom and' brought out some "fast ones," a dis- play of wit which could only he greet- ed with pleasure in the row of fat dowagers who laugh because it is obviously expected. The authors of the present opera are to be praised as the first who have appearently re- alized that comedy of line has never been a successful substitute for com- edy of situation. Despite what any one may say, "Tambourine" has a plot of no little interest. There is no scene which does not effectually further the plot to the end, and only one scene that is not adequately handled. If the cli- mactic appearance of the queen is dampened by the insufficient dramatic ability of the rest of the cast, even that can be forgiven. Again the au- Ithors are to be congratulated for hav- ing seen that an opera- is first of all drama. Of course it has its faults, but they are- fortunately not the result of the new experiment, but the effect of a retrogression back to type, a conces- sion no doubt to the traditional in opera. These are few, but so notice- ably break the essential unity of the whole production that they cannot escape notice. First is the Tuxedo and cane chorus of the Girl in White number. It is an interesting dance, and beautifully done, but beauty ceased to be its own excuse for being with the perfection of modern cos- metics, and this dance is a deliberate interpolation damaging to the whole effect of the opera. Second is the comedysong of Sniggs and the Diplo- mat, into which campus affairs are dragged in by sheer force with an effect that can only be deliterious to the unity of the opera. Then there was the obvious bid for rah rah with the singing of the Victors, no doubt1 well calculated to stir the unaccus- tomed blood of the alumni but scarce- ly adequate to arouse a present day student to anything but luke warm sentiment. Some day in the future when you gather your grandchildren about you and the great log burning in the fire place, (providing of course that cer- tain movements recently set on foot have not reached such alarming pro- portions that there will be no grand- children) you will tell them of the best opera you ever saw, and per- haps you may remember to describe td them the almost superhuman finesse of direction. My heart goes out to the man that conceived th'e mystic chorus-not the chorus itself, but the picture of the two motionless sentinels back stage-as admirable l a conception as I have seen in the.1 opera. It was characteristic of the care with which the whole produc- tion was staged. * INTERPRETATION CONTEST The preliminaries for the oral inter- pretation contest, which is to be con- ducted by Professor Hollister, will be held in the auditorium of University Hall at 4:00 o'clock this afternoon and at 9:00 o'clock tomorrow morn- ing. Those who wish desire to enter the contest are asked to indicate the time they will tryout by writing their names on the lists posted in the west bulletin board in room, 302, Mason Hall. * * * Books Our Juvenile Departmnents are filled with a fine selecton of books, games and stationery for little brothers ald sisters. We are showing many beautifully illustrated editions. TAKE HOME BOOKS FROM ANN ARBOR Ulah"rt 's Book Stores Open Ebenings Until Christmas At Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk. ....... t THE MCHIGN DALY FIDAY DE~lMI3R MOWN*2 -c 1h I MANN IS ce "" lIlI I FACTORY MADE Means Skill and Quality in Our Shop. Save a Dollar or More at the FACTORY HAT STORE I 617 Packard Street. Phone 7415. (Where D. U. 4L. Stops at State St.) Musi ""111IiiI" 1I .i for Children I i t This Cold Weather Will Make You Appreciate Our Heated Ballroom c by Jack Scott and his 10-piece Club estra. The floor is in fine condition. enjoy our service and equipment. i . 1 Orch will c Royal You PLEASE DONT MAK E ATH S ON T HE dslilfilililisllu m llifillillilllill s isio DiDi4Dl V 1 QJ,,,URANCER ,.A( MY. Inglis iU . i Irving armohis,DS C CHIROPODIST AND ORTHOPEDIST 707 N. University Ave. Phone 21212 I s 4 I T1HE G REY Corner Liberty and Maynard rot Lunches 11:00-1:30 5:00-7:00 Afternoon Tea 3:00-4:00, Salads, Sandwiches and Ice Cream Orders Taken for Salads, Sandwiches and Ice Cream to Take Out. w. ' N y Night Editor-WIIiLARD B. CROSBY THIE FRESHMAN GAINS-WHAT? Deferred rushing would cause freshmen to lose the good influence which they now obtain by being af- filiated with fraternities, say the op- ponents of deferred rushing plans which are now being considered by the Interfraternity council. The claim is made that the first year men would not attain as good scholastic records, I that they would not be influenced to enter campus activities, and that they would not receive the social develop- ment that they now receive. ! THIS SHOE 'I '{ ,.; With the University in an over- crowded condition, and with the num- her of students who are here without a purpose increasing every year, would it not be better if some of these individuals who do not care partic- ularly about an education were weed- ed out during their first year of resi- dence? They should not be pampered in their work so that they are barely able to secure the required number of hours to be initiated. Many of them get through the first year and then spend the rest of their college careers on probation until they are requested to leave. The kind of a student who merely go _s out for campus activities because some upperclassman in his fraternity house tells him to, is not the kind who attains success. The student who makes a success of campus work is the one who goes into it for the love of it, the one who finds his work really interesting. The question of the social develop- ment which a freshman obtains through fraternity connections is de- batable. Fraternities may prove bene- ficial, or they may not, each individ- ual reacting differently to such in- fluences. These three arguments which have been advanced by the opponents of deferred rushing are unconvincing. Thyshould not be sufficient to keep 1hce council from taking some action towards trying a new system of rush- WHOLESALE PAROLES Deserting the attitude of defiance which he has employed in his recent dealings with the public, Fred E. Janette, state parole commissioner, has announced that the number of has been ;,::aired by us and looks like new. This is what our painstaking workmanship will accomplish. Bring your shoes to us for complete sat- isfaction. 625 East Liberty i We Outfit Them Completely in Our BOYS DEP r Wall -Over y~ 3.0, e W-1 PROFESSOR CAMPBELL'S REPORT Next Sunday's issue of Chimes will contain the report presented to the faculty by Professor 0.. J. Campbell,- as a result of his participation as representative of the University at the Conference on the Drama in American Universities and Little Theaters, which was held at Pitts- burgh, November 27. Professor Campbell's report is regarded by those who have already examined it asj highly important from the standpoint of general campus dramatics. 1 i i If shoes were railway tickets this would be an excursion Railway tickets are priced for how far they will carry you. If shoes were sold that way, this would be an excursion. Here's a shoe built with the quality that has made Walk-Over the world's largest maker of trade-marked shoes. Wear it, and see if it doesn't carry you farther, in more solid comfort, than any I !° i 4