1 AGE FOUR TE-IFMCI- IIAM flATL V TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 192ri {.; }y,, Ltl{{ ...L 2A V!'?Atl L.(-ZAL { TUESAY. A~iCT 2.tfIf I Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conterence Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled 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, M~ichigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; bushues., 2=214. JDITOPJAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W. DAVIS ,,w Chairman, Editorial Board.... Norman R. Thal City Editor............Robert S. Mansfield News Editor............Manning Houseworth ',,nen s Editor............Helen S. Ramsay ,ort's Editor...............Joseph Kruger T7 elegraph Editor..........William Walthour Music and Drama........Robert B. Henderson Night Editors Smith H. Cady Leonard C. Hall Vobert T. DeVore Thomas V. Koykka W. Calvin Patterson Assistant City Editors Irwin Olian Frederick H. Shillito Assistants Gertrude Bailey ( hnrles Behymer William Bryer I' Ilip Brooks Fartn Buckingham Stratton Buck Carl Burger Idgar Carter Iuseph C.hamberlain Mcyer Cohen (! lton Champe ," ,;: s Doubleday acn It. Gutekunst A i~~wGoodman nos . IHerald Marion Kubik Harriett Levy Ellis Merry Dorothy Morehouse Margaret Parker ctanfordN. Phelps ~imon Rosenbaum Wilton Simpson Janet Sinclair Courtland Smith Stanley Steinko Louis Tendler Henry Thurnau David C. Vokes Marion Wells Vassam A Wilson homas C. Winter Marguerite Zilske sue. Other newspapers in the United States may welcome their new con- temporary, for it covers for the pub- lic a field that has long been ne- glected. PERSONAL LIBERTIES At the University of Illinois there is a rule which prohibits students from smoking on the campus or in that portion of the city which im- mediately adjoins the campus. That the rule really means something and was not merely issued to satisfy rabid reformers is evidenced by the fact that twenty students and one in- structor were arrested a few days ago by the university police for violation of the rule. The restricted area in- cludes Green street, the State street of Urbana, on which are located a great many of the fraternity houses. If a student wishes to smoke be- tween classes he must walk outside of the campus confines which would be so far from his classroom that he would be unable to get back before the class is half over. Green street, being included, he cannot sit on his front porch and enjoy a smoke in the evening; nor should he smoke in his 'room. In the hurry to make an eight o'clock, he cannot even have that last quieting cigarette between breakfast and classroom. Such harsh and narrow ruling have never been known on any other large university campus, although they are common enough with very small or denominational colleges where the founder or body of founders has in- flicted some narrow reflection of his own ego on the succeeding genera- tions of students.. Some persons car- ry their private moralities so far that they become obsessions, if not manias, with them, and they are sometimes perpetuated in newly founded col- leges. But such things cannot be said about a state university like Illinois which does not have to follow the narrow dictates of a founder. It f would seem that when students reach the age when parents allow them to attend college that they should be able to govern their lives as they see fit, without the bothersome interfer- ence of super-ethical deans. It is not uncommon for colleges to have restrictive rulings-they are al- most a necessity. Here, at Michigan, the strictest rule is aimed at prohibi- tion, but that is a national law; at Wisconsin, the student newspaper published a tobacco advertisement contrary to an antiquated rule, and the W. C. T. U. protested, although the university authorities said nothing; at Northwestern, a varsity athlete was declared ineligible, not because he married, but because lie eloped to do so, which was contrary to a university rule; but none of these compare with the distastefulness of the Illinois rul- ing, for they do not deprive anyone of a great amount of personal libert. It seems strange to us at Michigan, with so much freedom and liberty, that students, supposedly educated persons, should be asked to tolerate such restrictions on their personal rights as American citizens. CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Playing Cards Tallies BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER BYRON W. PARKER Advertising................Joseph J. Finn Advertising.............Frank R. Dentz, Jr. Advertising.......... .....Win. L. Mullin Adv. ermuisn-.........Thomas D. Olmsted, Jr. S n...........Rudolph Bostelman Accounts...................Paul W. Arnold Assistants TONIGHT: "The Student Prince" il the Whitney theatre at 8 o'cloc. TONIGHT: The Students' Recital in the School of Muslc auditorimn at 8 o'clock. TONIGHT : The Cosmopolitan Club presents "lnternaationaal Night" in 1till auditoriuim at 8 o'clock. * * a "THE STVDENT PR.NCE" A review, by Robert Henderson. "The Student Prince" is a show, a show-off. It is Shubert from begin- ning to end, costumes, hokum, razzle- dazzle, lush music, and it is corking entertainment--strange synonyms. After all, sentiment is the trick that makes the world go round. The Prince who loves his Cinderella sla- vey, the lovely Princess who must finally become his queen, the nobility of soft palaver and beer, old Heidel- berg and drinking songs. all have the same grand operatic appeal. We can laugh at the comedian whose tech- nique shames the slapstick of the "Beef Trust Beauties," we can cry at Prince Karl's tinsel sorrows, we wor- ship the whole line of its heart ap- p eal. The great virtue of "The Student Prince" over its heavy predecessors is the odl intelligence shown in the underlying plot. Cinderella does not, perversely as fits the tradition, gain her Prince Charming, and the glass slipper strangely fits a dainter foot. Better yet, the company now at the Whitney theatre is far superior to the troupe that fared so fatuously through the holidays in Detroit. There is someone in the men's chorus with a beautiful voice that invariably stirred the house; even Karl Franz does not sicken one as did the diva in Detroit; and Kathie is really extraordinarily played by a Miss Howe. Her perform- ance in what could so easily become a hopeless part was always convinc- ing, so fresh and grateful. A show, a show-off, the Jews in the chorus, the occasional acting that might make Mansfield wiggle in his hallowed grave; the gorgeous cost-~ umes, the songs, the entire enthusias- tic dash make "The Student Prince." The houses are always packed, the audiences eat it up; it is the theatre theatric, the climactic, grand man- ner burst of the million-dollar revue. * S* THIE STUIDENTS' RECITAL The following program will be giv- en this evening in the School of Mu- sic auditorium at eight o'clock by the advanced students of the University School of Music: Impromptu in F sharp.......Chopin Polonaise.................McDowell Virginia Tice Concerto, E minor..........Nardini Allegro moderato Andante contabileI Allegretto gragioso Frances Gorsline Le Cavalier Fantastique ....Godard Reba Roney Concerto in El minor....Mendelssohn Second movement Helen Hays Reverie..............IDebussy-Engel Vogel als Prophet... Schumann-Auer Menuet.....................Mozart Mary Alice Case Scherzo B minor, Op. 20...... Chopin Anna Mae Lewis Accompaniments by Lena Pavit and Dwight Steere. When I heard this piano last sum- mer at the estate of John Hays H1am- mond, Jr., just outside of Gloucester,j Massachusetts, the full sustained tones, the almost organ-wise depth and grandeur appeared revolutionary. Saturday evening it seemed little more than a piano of certain reson- a nce. For the rest of the recital--the odd, distended piano shoved into a corner -the entire attention was centered1 on the conductor and his gestures. The compositions, save the Bach Pas- sacaglia after the intermission, were so bluntly modern as to satisfy even the youngest generation with their faith in all music after Wagner. Bridge Sets Chess and Checker Sets traha ms Book Siltores At Both Ends of the Diagonal lWalk I Score Cards s i , : mrsnwy,,i SKILLED REPAIRING I pr i h. We have earned the right to this claim. MUSIC AND DRAMA Is unquestionably the logical place to buy your Fountain Pens -have them properly fitted and serviced. Gft R A H A M S Made in Ann Arbor, is in a class by itself. No pen like it or to compare with it. T drops capacity. A self-starter, an even, reliable flow. Points made by the best pen makers and fitted and serviced by Rider himself.; Une ualea: ry-ce right here in Ann Arbor. Can you beat it?. Ask for a demonstration R Pen and Ink ma ists 315, State St. INK THAT WONT WASH OFF OR FADE. GOVERNMENT STANDARD. 24 HOUR SERVICE ii i lo xi r J' Leopold Stokowski Director of the Philadelphia Symphony Albeniz, Debussy, the Strawinsky V, George H. Annable, Jr. XV. Carl Bauer John 11. Bobrink .V, J Cox Marion A. Daniel Mary Flinkerman *Iau'es R. t ePuy Stan Gilbert T. Kenneth Haven rank~ 1MIsmes Frank Mosher F. A. Norquist Loleta G. Parker David Perrot Robert Prentiss Win. C. Pusch Joseph D. Ryan Stevart Sinclair Mance Solomon Thomas Sunderland Win. J. Weinan Sy rvareW Smith Sidney Wilson "L'Oiseau de Feu" fairly swept the audience away with their whirlwind of pagan color: strong and heady as sweet wine. "The greatest orchestra in the world" they call it: such are the virtue of legends. But be content that you heard this fall with the New York Symphony and the electric Mr. Maier an evening of noble line and sincerity such as Stokowski, with all his glory, scarecly touched. * * * i : :f CH.IIROIPODJIST AINDI ORTH OPEDIST 707 N. University Ae. Phone 21212 MANN'S a "A Wiser and Better Place to Buy." New Spring lats Are Ready. lHats Clealed awl1 Blocked, FACTORY HAT STORE 417 Packard Street. Phone 74.1 (Where I). U. I. Stops at State St.) TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1926 Night E1ditor-W. C. PATTERSON "The United States, through long experience, has come to the conclusion that offensive or de- fensive alliances, political or mil- itary, are not in harmony with the principles of our Government, or in the interests of our people. That principle has become the cornerstone of our foreign policy.j This does not mean isolation or refusal to co-operate as we have always done with other nations in all these non-political activities for the advancement of science, education, commerce and other activities so important to modern civilization."-Secretary Kellogg. THE UNITED STATES DAILY On March 4, a new daily newspaper, The United States Daily, will make' its appearance at Washington, fill-' ing a need that has long been appar- ent in thLe journalistic world. The new paper will carry only govern- mental news, but will cover it com- plktely, to an extent that no general .ewspaper can approach, and very few of which even attempt. And it will be unbiased, the organ of no po- litical party, even the editorial page being omitted. With the tremendous growth of the government's activities, the need of a daily newspaper accurately reporting i them has become obvious. General newspapers make no effort to print de- tailed government reports, yet there is a large class of persons in Wash- ington and elsewhere in the country, who are vitally interested in exactlyI Nvhat happens, and who are capable of understanding the reports. Here- tofore this large potential circulation has been untouched; The United States Daily should be a sound finan- cial venture as well as a valuable source of ingformation to the student ofd government. Several newspapers, The New York Times, The Christian Science Monitor, The Philadelphia Public Ledger, and, others carry long accounts of import- ant government happenings, but none of them .attemrt to do a complete job, and in the case of less important gov- ernment business, they print nothing.I No general newspaper could afford to' give so much space to politics. It is for this reason that an ably edited po- litical daily will find a place for itself in ip in alifi. 't o ld TIlE OLD MODEL OF PROFESSOR * s To the Editor: COMEDY CLUB Recent discussions in Chimes of The following students were elected certain most recent models of pro- to membership in the Comedy Club at fessors who require no attendance at the tryouts held yesterday in New- classes, who ask no awkward ques- berry auditorium: tions, and who give no final examina- Helen Vos, '28; Edna Hill, '27; CarlI tions, suggest that possibly a word Purcell, '27; Daniel Huff, '27; For- may be said for the old style profes- rest Heath, '27; Paul Heering, '29; sor. Certain new style professors Herman Nyland, Jr., '28; William give further no courses and by their Bishop, '28; Harlan Cristy, '29; andl simple presence exude inspiration. Samuel Bonell, '28. With non-attendance on the part On Friday evening, March 5, the of the students, the non-attendance club tryouts for the annual spring. on the part of -the professor makes play, Shaw's "You Never Can Tell,"I a perfect combination in which will be held in Newberry auditoriumI instruction is given by the so-called from seven to nine o'lock, followingj "absent treatment." The certification which there will be a social meeting of the individuals should be made in .at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, hn 11204 Hill street. TFJ E HMES INTITON The formal initiation banquet of the Mimes was held last evening in the Michigan Union. In addition to Jesse Lynch Williams, holder of the Fellow- ship in Creative Arts, who was made an honorary memiber of the organiza- tion, the following, students were ad- i mit ted to membership:I Ward Tollizien, '27; George Greene, '26A; Gordon Ibbotson, '27; Valentine Davies, '27; Neal Nyland, '26; William Diener, '26; Richard Lutes, '27; and Howard Turner, '26. * * * THE UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY A review, by Vincent Wall. Beginning with two numbers by the University Symphony orchestra under the direction of Samuel Lockwood, the faculty concert rapidly reached a climax in the Chopin concerto that marked the program as one of thel E best given this year. In the first place the symphony orchestra itself was surprisingly good. The usual meaningless preliminary squawks left al impression of discord that was quickly dispelled by the sweeping opening chords of the "Overture to the Ballet, Promcthcus," Op. 43 of Beethovem, which was given in a man- ner not unworthy of Ossip Gabrilo- witch and the De roit Symphony it-' self. And all this as a very Iitting pre- hide for the wonderful artistry of Mlaud Okkelburg in the piano solos of the Chopin Concerto, E minor, Op. 11. It was truly remarkable, the whole performance: the delightful bell like tones that Mrs. Okkelburg found somewhere in the grand piano, the de- lightful nuances of tone in her al- most faultless interpretation, and finally the lyric background of a well- co-ordinated group of instruments. :Therewas a certain arabesque clar- )cter, a tilagree work that was per- fectly brought out; in fact there was scarcely a shade of meaning lost in the whole concerto, and there is a wealth of color to be found and depths to be reached that are most often only brushed over in a super- ficial manner. And in the concluding number there was not as much of an anti-climax as might be expected. There was a dash and spontaneity in the delivery of the four movements of Mendels- sohn's Symphony No. 4, A major, Op. 90 ("Italian") that prevented the cus- tonmary falling off after the suspense occasioned by the Chopin concerto. There was a power to the waves of harmony from the violins and violas coupled with a monotone of rhythm from the brass section that lifted the --- -t * *1 toErcabE With . ilege parties on famous"0"steamers of The Royal Mail Line Write for Illustrated Booklet. Sc1el xof Foreign Travel, Inc. 112 College St., New Haven, Conn i r . . ."'°..' ... . p 0 6, %W 11 w P LE ASE DON'T CA M PU 'S N 11 FILMS FILM DEVELOPING KODAKS, AND KODAK SUPPLIES Try - 719 N. University Avenue Phone 4515 Paths oi snow all grass roots don't nuae or fomnlice Uand(1kill beneathI I. Please use such patlls. - t j ie same way. In certain departments and schools this type of instruction would be so contrary tothes pulic interest that no one dares suggest the mnethod.. Certification of individuals as physi- cians, as engineers, as lawyers, or as pharmacists can not be made by this1 pleasant process. 4pparently thej literary college is regarded as a kind of "charm school" where this type of preparation can be given. Were the literary college designed simply to turn out poets and writers of fiction, this method suggested might be effi- cacious. However, it has frequently been hinted by poets and writers of note that creative work comes by perspiration .as well as by inspiration. A certain familiarity with the creative work of poets and writers of a by gone day has always in the past been re- garded as necessary for the budding poet; serious study of the great mas-j +ore i n, u - ,fo,-,mn hoc. aI av-c l,, THlE PHIILAiDELPIHIA SYMPHONA A review, by Robert IHenderson Leoinold Stokowshi is a tremendous, an exhausing artist, his orchestra is a debauch, his manners the tricks of. the genius-charlatan. Gentleman of the profile, a mass of yellow kinky hair; the scandalous morals, the Duse hands, he romped through his mad. program Saturday evening in the new MWasonic Temple, Detroit, with ,ll the. grotesque enthusiasm of the circus? clown. , Dividing his numbers so that the! first half lasted an hour and three quarters and the last half fifteen minutes, he chose the Rachmaninoff1 Concerto in C minor with the new Four-Pedal piano to open his program -,a concerto as the tuxedos were stilll hurrying in! Mr. Stokowski was un- fair to the instrument, obliterating f its startling effectiveness beneath the I SP E C A L VI C T 0 R The Victors March RECORD REL EEASE Yellow and Blue BY Unversity of Michigan.Band This record will not be listed in the regular supplement and for this reason we suggest the placing of your order now. Delivery soon. 11