PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY,' DECEMB~ER.16, 1l25 If aa.a. y. .Uu .f .. a' aa a i Suy 1UaVtl Published every morning except Monday during the Universit year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- Aitled to 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 o~f postage' granted by Third' Assistant" Post- master General. i Subscription by carrier, $340;' by mail, $4.0O. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. sard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business, 21214.' power to free a criminal, nullifying- the work of courts and prosecuting! attorneys. A board that posseses such power should be watched carefully, / and the personnel carefully selected. GOOD ' SHATING Paroles are sometimes deserved and '0 should be granted, but the freeing of GEDIs a man of the type of Perry in Illinois, or in the wholesale numbers that have As Gaylord suggests, we would like been released this year in Michigan, to call the attention of the Rev. Her- is showing a leniency that far ex- bert-Now wait a minute-Jump, thats ceeds the bounds of reason. it! to the fact that there is also goodf to convict a criminal and obtaiIa food to be gotten at Stabuck's, and long sentence i a difficult proposition b in the courts of the present day; it yY i. .i i 11 I! I. I MUsIC 11 !' A EpITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W. DAVIS Chairman, Editorial Board...Norman R. fhal ity Editor...........Robert S. Mansfield dews Editor ..........Manning Houseworth Wom en's Editor. .......... Helen S. Ramnsay Sports Editor............ ..Joseph Kruger -,elegraph Editor........William Walthour d usic and Drama...Robert B_. Henderson' Night Editors Smith H. Cady Lecnard C. Hall Willard B. Crosby Thomas V. Koykka Robert T. DeVore W. Calvin Patterson Assistant "City Editors Irwin Olians Frederick H. Shillite Assistants Gertrude E. Bailey Helen Morrow William T. Barbour Mar aret Parker Charles Bebymer Stanord N. Phelps Xilliam Breyr Evelyn Pratt Philip C. Brooks Marie Reed' .. Buckingham Simon Rosenbaum Edgar Carter Ruth Rosenthal (;arleton ChanP Wilton A. Simpson Eugene H. Gutekunst Janet Sinclair Douglas Doubleday Courtlarzd C. Smith MarysDunnigan Stanley Stein' ]Alles T. herald Clarissa Tapson lizabeth S. Kennedy Heny Thurna Miles Kimball David C. okes ftaron Kubik Chandler JWil e Nater x.-Mack CassaA. Wilson loais R. Markus Thomas C. Winter lls Merry Margurite Ziszke i, BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER BYRON W. PARKER Advertising..... ....Joseph 37. Fin AdverTising...........- . Olmstfd J Advertising...........Frank R. Dentz, r q. Advrtising................. W. L. Mui Cicalation.................-- . L. Newma ubliation............Rudolph Bostela Accounts.................Paul W. Arnol Assistants Ingred M. Alvin F. A. Norquist George H. Annable,Jr. Loleta G. Parker ac W. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow' John H. Bobrink Robert Prentiss V. J. Co Wm. C. Pusch , r " A. Pane Franklin J.Raune A. Rolland Damm Joseph Ryan a°ames R. DePuy argaret Smiti, Mary Flinterman Mance Solomon Margaret L. Funk Thomas Sunderland Stan Gilbert Egene Weinberg T. Kenneth Haven Wm. J. Weinman R. Nelson Sidney Wilson WEDNE$DAIY, DECEMBER 16, 192 Night Editor-SMITH H. CADY, JR "The American short lunch- hour has had a lot to do with our. prosperity. It was the custni in old days to devote a log period in the middle of the day to the dinner table and a little rest thereafter. Going back to the office, the executive was seldom able to get immediately into trim for the finish of the day's work, and thus it happened that the " working hours were extended into the evening and beyond the time that our physical powers are at their best. This has been wisely changed into the custom of con- centrating within a briefer time the activities of the day and de- voting to the more important matters the more productve hours. It isn't the length of time one works, but the manner in which one works-how time is used-that counts in the final re- sults."-J. H. Tregoe, executive manager of the National Associa- tion of Credit Men. ILLINOIS VS. MICHIGAN The Tegretable practice of state executives in releasing, on parole, criminals that have been tried and convicted by the courts of the state and sentenced to long terms in the penitentiary is proving to be unpop- ular in states other than Michigan. Illinois, the latest entrant in the field, is far behind Michigan in the number of prisoners dumped back on the state per year, but seems to be specializing in notorious criminals, 'who richly de- serve the punishment from which they are released. The case that is at present raising the ire of law enforcement officers in Illinois is that of Ira D. Perry, who confessed to murder committed during the -robery of a jewelry store in 1922. lie escaped the gallows, as d10 most murderers in Chicago and its vici- nity, but was sentenced to life im- prisonment, and now, through the action of Governor Len Small and his parole board, is once more at liberty, free to follow his old career, as stia- tistics show a large percentage of such men do. The Chicago Jewelers' association, which has not forgotten so soon the member of thei'r group who was mur- should at least be as long and tedious! a process for a criminal, once con-: victed,, to escape from serving his term. S--I AM DANGEROUS" "I'm not a politician. Im an a cci- dent. My inexperience is my best: qualification for office in these days. Some of my opponents to this revision of Senate rules cry that I want to run for office. They're talking their own language. I am not a candidate for any office. That is why I am danger- ous." With these and similar words, Vice, President Charles Gates Dawes ad- dressed representatives of the Repub- lican Women's clubs of Illinois several days before the opening of Congress last week. With these and similar words, the Vice President announced to the world in general, and to the Senate in particular, that he is still "Hell 'nd Maria" Charley. "I am not a candidate for any office. That is why I am dangerous." In these few words, Mr. Dawes made one of the greatest criticisms of our American system of government. He clearly indicated that he believes sel- fish motives are behind the actions of the majority of our political leaders, and whether he is right or wrong, there is a widespread agreement with this viewpoint. This lack of confidence in the in- tegrity of its politicians may not rest upon a firm foundation, but it has ex- isted in the public mind for so long that a change can hardly be expectedI in the normal course of events. Some- thing additional, something extra- normal, will be required to awaken any appreciable amount of confidence in the political leader in the hearts of the American public,-a public that in too many cases visualizes only gkraft and corruption as the motivating force of all government. Perhaps, then, if Mr. Dawes should effect his changes in the Senate rules, which he apparently will not be able to do, some small 'degree of faith in the cumbersome governmental ma- chinery might be. aroused in some small fraction of the 115;000,000 souls, which make up our nation. Perhaps this might come about, but we expect to tell our grand-children that all politicians. are corru tpti self-seek- in . m CAMPUS OPINON Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names; of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. purchased from the sock King on South University on the right side of the road. * * r This town seems to be crowded withE real and psuedo-real dramatic critics. Two of them (the real ones broke into the front page this morning, and then there are always the countless cohorts of the M. and D. column. * * Y CRITICISM The local viewpoint on the subject of dramatic criticism is a peculiar one. Very few of the local writers for the public would think of reviewing say an art exhibit, or discussing archi- tecture in print, and the number of those who will even think of writing ia musical judgment is tiny. Yet anyone of these will blandly and willingly seize upon the slightest op- portunity to expound at great length on any phase of the drama. By this we do not mean the Opera at all. It seems to us that !any student has a very definite right to discourse on such a production, which, after all, is a local production and a part of this campus. But we will venture to say that there are quantities of students working on campus publications at present who would no more think of writing fan essay on musical or liter- ary or sculptural subjects, who con- sider themselves quite capable to do this with drama, in spite of the fact that they have devoted no more time to the study of 'this subject than any of the others. This is probably because among the average students hereabouts, drama is the most popular or the arts. There are few, if any, who have never witnessed a play, and hundreds who have never seen an art exhibit or heard a concert. Nevertheless, we fail to see why because this is true, these yong critics, should fail to realize that a good dramatic criticism de- pends more on actual knowledge than any other form, chiefly because it ap- pears so easy to criticize. Because there are so many more elements which contribute to the pro- duction of a play than to any other form of art, one must have a much finer understanding of these elements and their co-ordination than in any other form of aesthetic discourse. r * * COMING We have just visited the Gargoyle office, and found the entire staff com- fortable seated in easy chairslooking over the piles and piles of contribu- tions for the Girls' number, (not an adv.) and we immediately became the proverbial green with envy. We see no reason why we should have to slave away at our own stuff all the time wen they just sit ack and throw the worst of it in the waste basket and the best to the press. Now this all led us to a big thought. After vacation we are going to fool the funny (not sarcasm, Oh, no) boys and 'run a boys number of Rolls-we will offer a prize of $0.45 to the person who sends in the best contribution. We shall run more than one issue, in all probability, as there are many more boys than girls on this campus. I * * * SEND IN THAT CONTRIBITTION NOW FOR THE BOYS' NUMBER OF ROLLS.-Adv. * * *- 7 LIMERICKS XXV A friend out in our neighborhood Has a car, new from tall-light to hood] Tis a beautiful busl But what's that to us? Would we trade him?-your damn right we would.I S * 9N SIPENI) THIS 'TI ME PRA.CTICING T'E Y NEW ' PUZZLE We wonder just what did happen between Knute Rockne and Columbia University. There is obviously a lotI to the matter that never will become public property, but someone made a' big mistake somewhere. ** * Now don't forget the. Boys' number. Sir Toby Tiffin.. "Drinking Causes Dry Leader's SonI To Lose His Wife"--Free Press head- :1 AND DRAMA I A THIS AFTERNOON: The Matinee Musicale presents the Canzonit Club in the Michigan Union ball-room at 4:30 o'clock. TONIGH1T: The Play Production classes present "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde in University hall at 8 o'clock. "THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL" Even greater than the commercial enthusiasm of Walter Prichard Eaton yesterday afternoon, Stark Young, dramatic critic of the New York Times, quite outdid himself in praise of George Tyler's production of "The School for Scandal," which played a single performance last week in New York and is opening at the New De-- troit Sunday evening, December 19. "For one fleeting performance," he says, "between showings in Boston and Newark, George Tyler set up his 'School for Scandal' last Sunday evening. The individual performances were without exception unusually adept, so that for once the whole was less than the sum of its parts. "None of the performances, never- theless, approached the perfection of Henrietta Crossman as Mrs. Oandour, (and who will ever forget her grand- mother in "Children of the Moon!"), 'beribboned, bewigged, bemannered, forsooth.' Miss Crossman evoked the very shade of what this comedy must have been in its glory. She bustled about the stage, dropping slander at every step, viviaciously, with the high moral enthusiasm of the hypocrite, confiding to the ear the most nourish- ing morsels. What a 'hooded serpent' she was! Several other parts in Mr. Tyler's production were played with the same high degree of artificiality-those of Moses, Trip, Rowley and Sir Oliver in particuliar. And Mr. Heggie's Sir Peter Teazle, an unembellished, straightforward interpretation, made one appreciate the actor's high intel- ligence. "What contrast does 'The School for Scandal' offer to the turgid drama of these pseudo-scientific days? Well, it has more wit than spleen. The pro- duction is mounted as Sheridan is supposed to have mounted it at the Drury Lane in 1777, with a row of footlight reflectors in place, candela- brp hanging from above and indiffer- ent scenery painted on canvas-in sum, with no tiresome recrudescence of reality. "For nearly everyone this comedy appeared to be satirizing his neigh- bor-and a very good feeling that was. indeed. Enough plot to serve for unity in this satire on a common foible, the entire atmosphere was of unbounded, unbuttoned entertain- ment." MAUIME WILDE With the Opera and the whole rush of everything it hardly seems possible that the date has arrived this even- ing for Professor Hollister's produc- tion of "The Importance of Being Earnest." But even though your for- tune is spent, you must not miss this comedy-so away and incomparably beyond anything but Shaw-or gorge- ously bad manners. It is a play that nothing can kill, and any amount of talent can raise to the height of entertainment. It is deadly serious nonsense, and if God be good will be played for all the low comedy that it is worth. THE CANZONIT CLUB Under the auspices of the Matinee I Musicale, the Canzonit Club of Adrian, a chorus of eleven women's voices under the direction of James Spencer, will present the following program of Christmas music this afternoon in the ball room of the Michigan Union at four-thirty o'clock: I. While Shepherds Watched.. Praetorius Noel of the Bressan Waits..Darcieux Mid Yan Pale Helavens..Noel Bressan (Arranged by Reynolds) The Club II.I Jesu Bambino.................Yon Josephine Lambie III. Alsatian Christmas Song....... ...........Arranged by Mirande Child Jesus ..G............Gow The Club IV. Boyhood.................... Garnett Clara Wellhauser V. The Shepherd's Story......Dickenson The Club * * s FORTUN " The annual production of the Princeton Triangle club, this year en- titled "Fortuno" and with a setting MANN'S 1t HOLIDAY SALE ON ALL HATS IN STOCK Have your hat cleaned and blocked before going home. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street. Phone 741 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State St. PLEASE DON'T MAKE PATHS ON THE l i I 1 I . 4 .) ______ { I - ______._ ;;,__ : _ h Cbrisetmas Ilk artv TONIGHT -_ 8-10CDa __ Open E)enings Until Christmas At Both Enids of theDiagonal Walk. .Books for Children Our Juvenile Departments are filled with a fine selecton of books, games and stationery for little brothers and sisters. We are showing many beautifully illustrated editions. TAKE HOME BOOKS FROM ANN ARBOR Graham's Book Stores ... .. . , Thirty years of experience is back of the management -of the "CLARK" Summer and Winter Foreign Tours. Open to both men and women. ALSO Private Tour for Women, sail- ing from New York, June 26th. MRS. M. E. CAKE, Hall House Dormitory, 1145 Washtenaw Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan, has traveled under this man- agement. Phone 3597. .: Santa Claus and all the extra things that make a Christmas party distinctive. 75c per couple. Tickets at Slater's Book Shop. AC adew _ __ ____..._..r..., -----y-- =. .. . -.: t <<, , % G" , r - q i, t 1 . . NATIONALISM AND THE LEAGUi To the Editor: M.M.M. believes that "nationialisn has been a hated word-and the tool of bourgeois greed." That "govern- ment operating in the interest 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." Consequently "investing our hopes and efforts in the League of Nations" is our duty, the "initial step" in a path of Service. Granted that nationalism is the cause of wars, that it is pro-bour- geois, that it is almost anything he wishes to call it, yet what better has the League of Nations to offer? "A chain is no longer than its weakest~ link" is trite, but true. 'If the League of Nations, then, is to be the "initial step" in our ascension into the land of perfection, where the "greatest good" is the dictum scrawled upon the banner, would we not be perpe- trating a monstrous crime? In the first place, nationalism is the very foundation of the League of Na- tions; nationalism is the very embodi- ment of all that is holy to the League. And what begot this miracle child to which we should intrust the future? Selfishness and fear-the desire of the benevolent allies to keep what they had seized, to make thiemselve se- cure from a war of revenge. And what is this League but the "tool of bourgeois greed?" The needy infant, Russia, was turned awiay-the League is for bourgeois nations only . Aid who dominates the League? The same John Bull that holds the noses of hundreds of millions oft weaker peoples to the grindstone that the bourgeois "Forsytes" and "Babbits";in Great Britain may prosper. Oh, sublime altruism, if we, the second greatest bourgeois nation of the world, must set out to lead our We have a large line of Christmas Trees in all sizes From 50 cents to $2 GET YOUR PICK EARLY ID r BO . Filling Station Corner of Washington and Division Phone 21120 1' - ..~ It's pleasant to know that even if one must economize in the matter of foods the finest are still available on account of Arcade prices I; i