THE MICHIGAN DAILY WDE Sf Published every morning exept Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. 'The rAssociated Press is exclusively en- tit to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise redited in this paper and the local news pub' 'lshed herein. l~ntered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Uchigan as second class matter. Special rate a postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, 4.0; by mail, 4&fices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ltard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 2r7r4. EDIORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR JO H. CHAMBERLIN Editor. .........llis B Merry Editor Michigan Weekly.. CharlesE. Behymer Staff Editor... . . Philip C. Brooks City Editor...........curtland C. Smith Women's Editor..........Marian L. Welles Sports Editor..........Herbert $.. Vedder Theater, Books and Music. Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Assistant City Editor.... Richard C Kurvink Night :Editors Robert E. Finch G. Thomas McKean Ja Stewart Hooker Kenneth G. Patrick asu J1 Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum. Reporters Esther Anderson fohn H. Maloney Margaret Arthur Marion McDonald Alex A. Bochnowski Charles S. Monroe Jean Campbell Catherine Price Jessie Church Harold L. Passman Blanchard W. Cleland Morris W. Quinn Clarence N. Edelsun Rita Rosenthal Margaret Gross, Pierce. Rosenberg Valborg Egeland Eleanor Sribner Marjorie F'ollmer Corinne Schwarz James B. Freeman Robert G. Silbar Robert J. Gessner Howard F. Simon Alaine EGruber George E. Simons Alice Hagelshaw Rowena Stillman oseph . Howell Syvia Stone J. Wallace Hushen George Tilley Charles R. Kaufman Bert. K. Tritscheller WilliamnF. Kerby .dward L. Warner, Jr. Lawrence R. Klein Benjamin: S. Washer Donald J. Kline Leo J. Yoedicke kally ,Knox Joseph Zwerding _ack L. Lait, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM C. PUSCH Assistant Manager...George H. Annable, Jr. Advertising.............Richard A, Mey. Advertising..............Arthur M. Hinkley rdvtrtising...............Edward L. Hulse Avertising .........John W. Ruswinckel Accounts..,.... .Raymond Wachter Circulation.........George B. An, Jr. Publication rg......Harvey Talcott Assistants George Bradley Ray HAfelich Marie Brummeler Hal A. Jaehn limes :Carpenter ames Jordan Charles K. Correll Marion Kerr :arbara Cromell Thales N. Lenington "Mary Tiyely Catherine McKinven Bessie V. Egeland Doroth Lyons Una Felker Alex K. Scherer Katherine Frohne George Spater Douglass Fulet Ruth Thompson Beatrice Greenberg Herbert E. Varnum ielen Gross Lawrence Walkley J.Hammer Hannah Walle; Carl W. Hammer WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1928 Night Editor-G. THOMAS MKEAN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE The faculty of the College of Liter- ature, Science, and the Arts has re- jected the University college proposal. The vote on the measure was close- extremely close, with only four bal- lots dividing victory from defeat and with 26 votes uncast-but the fact re- mains that the sense of the literary faculty must be taken as being dis- tinctly opposed to this new and ex- ceptional educational proposal whAdh .has attracted nation-wide attention. The reasons given for this rejec- tion by the literary faculty are per- fectly logical. More than 73 per cent of the increase in revenue derived -from the removal of the mill tax limit at the last session of the state legis- lature has been spent on the regular administrative expansion of the Uni- versity through the addition of new units, such as the forestry school. For the same reason the regular depart- ments of the literary college have been held in many cases to increases of less than one per cent in their budgets-increases scarcely fonson- ant with the increase in enrollment and instructional costs. The faculty of the College of Liter- ature, Science, and the Arts felt that the organization of an additional ad- ministrative unit-the University col- lege-would impose an added burden on the already overtaxed coffers of the University. On this basis they refused approval to the project. Never once during the lengthy debate, ac- cording to literary college officials, was the point sustained that the Uni- versity college would offer instruc- tional facilities inferior to those of the present literary college. The vote is consequently in no way a criticism of the idea behind the project nor of the men who proposed it. It is a frank, open, and perhaps justifiable attitude which sees the facts of finan- ces as they are, and takes them into account-something which is certainly laudable in a deliberate assembly. The rejection of the project by the engineeriftg faculty, though equally justifiable, is founded on an entirely, different basis-the basis of instruc- tional -jeopardy-and is therefore lessi amendable to change. The combined opposition of the two major faculties, including as they do more than one- half of the University staff on their tion for 'adjustment. Whatever thei case, the project of the University college, if it finally emerges in prac- tice, Is likely to be a much more sound and practical program for the consideration it has received at the hands of the literary and engineering' faculties.1 AGE AND A PRESIDENT A phase of presidential candidacy, seldom considered publicly, but pro- jected into the foreground by a recent article in the New York Times by Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science department, is the question of age and its effect as a qualification for the high office. Professor Brown points out that the average age of our Presidents has been 55 years at the time of inauguration, and the ages given of the leading candidates at the present time are interesting indeed. 'Walsh, according to the figures, is the oldest prominent candidate in either party, being 69, while Curtis, another western senator, closely fol- lows him, being a year younger. Low- den, Reed, and Norris are 67, Hughes is 66, Pomerene is 65, Watson 64, Dawes and Borah are 63, Longworth is 60, Baker, Hull, and Willis are 57, Coolidge and Robinson are 56, Smith is 55, Hoover is 54, Ritchie i 52, and George, senator from Georgia, Is the youngest of the group, being 51. There is no doubt that the position of the Presidency is a more or less deadly one. Roosevelt, at the end of his term, though a young man, ex- perienced all of the reactions of old age, the jovial Taft survived in ro- bust health, and then Wilson, who followed him, left the White House a human wreck with only a short time to live. Harding, his successor, died after two years in office, and it is not absurd to believe that the reason for Coolidge's desired retirem'ent at the present time is due in no small meas- ure to the fact that Coolidge is a tired man, and willing to leave the cares of office behind him. Age may not be an exact scale by which to judge the physical stamina of the candidates, for Smith at 54 is far from being as vigorous and healthy a man as Curtis at 68, but the factors of youth and vitality, both of which qualities the office puts to a severe test, should not be neglected by the voters when they go to the polls'next fall. It is of extreme con- sequence to the nation as a whole that the man who occupies the Presi- dential chair during the next four years be able to give the best of his abilities to the task, and no man who suffers from physical ailment can ac- complish this. CAPTAIN TILDEN After a six years unbroken cap- taincy of the United States Davis Cup team by Richard N. Williams, the committee in charge has at last chosen William T. Tilden, ranking player for the past eight years, as the new captain. At the same time, the Committee designated that Tilden was to play in the American zone in the challege round; a decision which Til- den will probably accept although he personally apposes the move. Tilden is undoubtedly the logical man to captain the team. Although he is older and it is agreed that he is not at his former heights, he still has invaluable experience and canniness to impart to the younger men who will soon be carrying the tennis bur- den for the United States. Of the six selected to report to Tilden and try out for the team to oppose Mexico, Hunter is the only older player in the group. Lott, Hennessy, Jones, Allison, and 'Van Ryn still have their better years ahead, and with' Tilden's many years of Davis Cup and cham- pionship experience and his sparkling leadership, there is little doubt but what the -tennis officials have left no stone unturned to recover one of Sportdom's greatest trophies for the United States. OASE ROLLS I /ESS'NC' OFSONPRINGJ. At last the B. and G. boys have triumphed over the unsuspecting stu- dents. Better than a brittle motor-1 cop, or an assistant-to-the-dean, theyl have discovered the ideal method of enforcing their edict, "Don't Make Paths On The Campus." * * * With the campus blossoming out in its new spring suit, it looks as though the B and G boys were preparing a home-like reception for a delegation from M.S.C.-the Michigan School of Cows. * * * "And they call this a one-horse town," murmured the Suffering Soph- omore. * * * As one mere student remarked to another, "This just goes to show what you may exlect from the auto ban." * * * THEATER BOOKS MUSIC RAE NOW-Another Bargain Lew Cody-Aileen Pringle Tn T EA FOR T H REE I Usual Short Subjects This "Ad" with 10c 1 Everything You Need in Your Work Pencils-Bluebooks-Paper--Candy---Magazines. 1i South University .1 i i i i i i i i BANNED BATTERINGS "Among the other inspirations obtained from his study of mice," cracked the Joyless Junior, "I suppose that's where President Little got his ideas on the auto- mobile ban." * * * FACULTY SETS EXAMPLE VQR STUDENT COUNCILMEN After four long and distinctive ses- sions, after several published changes of mind, our honored literary faculty have reached the conclusion that they do not favor the University college. * * * These men, we are reminded, are the same who expect us to write com- prehensive answers to a dozen or so examination questions in the space of three hours. * * * "It may be a good idea," commented the Superfluous Senior, "but you can guess why I'm glad they voted it down." * * * THEY'VE GONE OUT FOR WENLEY'S PHILOSOPHY Tradition hounds who signed up for Philosophy for the sake of living up to the old Cap Night song, report that Professor Wenley's vacation did not hurt him in the least. . * * * "If all the notes on the lectures were laid end to end," remarked the Captivating Coed, "They still would not cover anything." "It's queer how much of this I can understand when I'm fast asleep," re- marked one hardy sleep-walker. At least, Professor Wenley is the one lecturer on the campus who free- ly admits that he doesn't know what he is talking about "TOO MUCH SCOTCH" WAIL FAIR QUEENS AT PENNY CARNIVAL True love came to the testing. ground last week when popular co- eds invited their boy friends to come down to the Penny Carnival and do their stuff "for the benefit of the league." Rumor has it that one fair maid returned three fraternity pins because her supposedly fond admirers failed to iurchiase more than a dozen five- cent chances for the five dollar raffle. Of course the carnival was a great financial success. But it is reported that many a lad lied his soul away for a couple of pennies. And the beau- tiful saleswomen were waxing quite sarcastic, long ere the evening waned. "It's my Scotchi blood," declared Abe Goldberg, '29B.Ad., as lie turned down invitations to the bathing beau- ties and the wax works. JEB SUSPECTED The campus cut-up almost broke up one of the concessions, when he walked out munching on Graham's best seller. The boys who got the biggest kick Ovit of the shine stand were those who have been waiting table at the Alphi Phi house. Benijamin Bolt. poets, cartoonists, or master linguists almost over night. Time is not given a chance to hang heavy on American hands. The fondest memories of most peo- ple center around carefree hours spent in meandering, whimsical con- versation or moments of solitude be- TONIGHT: A program of Italian music will be given by the Circolo Italiano at 7:30 o'clock in Lane Hall auditorium. TONIGHT: The Rockford Players present Henrik Ibsen's ."Hedda Gab- Ier" in the Whitney theater at S o'clock. * * * EMPEROR CHRISTOPHE "BLACK MAJESTY," by Joit W. Vandercook; New York: Harper and Brothers; $2.50. One seldom , finds a biographical romance offering the thrills that are so abundant in this story of black freedom. Black Majesty is a beauti- fully written book, far more exciting than a historical romance is expected to be. And therein lies the sole fal- lacy of the book. - Every page of Black Majesty is brilliantly and cleverly written. The material, covering the life of Henry Christophe, the black slave who died the tyranical despot of Haiti, is superbly dramatic. But Mr. Vander- cook is not content with this; and in- stead of a dramatic (and authentic) history of the rise and fall of a black empire, he portrays a highly theatri- calized romance. In which he has devised many fantasticclegends which result in brutal inaccuracy. But bad history does not spoil this tale, gorgeous with the recitals of Negro conclaves. These conclaves and the just perceptible unrest of the Blacks bring about the Haitian revo- lution and the reign of Christophe. In whose powerful hands it was destined to grow until the Black despot could no longer rule over its kingdom. Dis- playing the Negroid fantasy, Christo- phe realizing the impossibility of re- taining his glory committed suicide by the means of a gold bullet molded many years before. This epic of black civilization paral- lels the revolution in France, and is inspired by the news of this equality. The rebellion was built up by cruel madness and aspiration for the long sought freedom. All in all it is the portrayal of the rise and fall of an empire, an empire in which the peo- pOle were African and the ideas European. By Arthur Wright. "THE BARKER" Following "Hedda Gabler" the Rockford Players will present Kenyon Nicholson's carnival melodrama "The Barker." This play represents the suffering oft "Nifty Miller" a side show barker, when his son Chris is vamped by a woman of sporadic mor- als, called Lou. The representation of his pain, when he finds that his son has been drawn into the very trap which he wished to protect him from, is deft and understanding. The author has caught the principal illusions of the carnival man, his naive faith in the efficacy of a college education to make a gentleman, his firm belief in the value of mere respectability, and his sentimental idealization of the hearth and home. We are shown these things toppling with a crash about the head of the barker. Out of the ruin of his ideals he emerges with only the real things of his life, his love for Carry, the Hula dancer, and his attachment to the carnival life. Charles Warburton who has played the part of "Nifty Miller" before, in spite of the fact that people like the barker are indigenous to America only,manages to catch the gipsy at- titude, which is after all universal, in a thoroughly convincing portrayal. H. M. CHICAGO OPERA Chicago is a city of magnificences. Things are done there on only one scale-the gran'dest, the largest and themost sumptuous. There are the best police force, the finest under- world, the most notorious mayor, the very finest hotels, and now the city of big winds and big business is laying claim to a new splendor, that is, opera that is self-supporting. This is not to say that "Chi"' has so advanced in musical taste as to demand opera in a box office way, but the fact, never- theless, remains. What makes this possible is obvi- ously the Presidency of Samuel Insull of the Chicago Civic Opera company. Apparently he has heard with some I sympathy the cries of the mulcted guarantors at the close of every sea- son and in an effort to reduce the sum total of misery in that great city of few but eager music lovers has. turned to Big Business for a remedy. The result is a plan whereby money ! is hory~wea to itn im-h- . o cr. ./2 QY ,a r , r "Framed In the pr~odigality of When Shakespeare wrote this speech for Richard hemust have seen the handwriting on the wall-a Coca-Cola ad reading: Good things from nine sunny climes pdured into a single glass SOON BEN HUR _AE What Shakespeare says about Coca-Cola Delicious and Refreshing KING RICIARD III Act I, Scene 2 The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Ga. 4-TNTGW 8milon a day -I T H AD T O B E G O OD T O G ET WH E RE I T I S rm",IqTmlr PR i 11111T1111T Ii 111111 TITtIW-i * y c 4 ~ 'I II I'. EDITORIAL COMMENTj LEISURE (The Minnesota Daily.) In his "Theory of the Leisure Class," Professor Veblen has shown how the traditions of a leisure class may influence the minds and tastes of a people. According to this hy- pothesis, the manner in which a na- tion employs its leisure time should furnish a fairly reliable index of its attitude towards its work. And it is undoubtedly true that even an individ- ual's work habits may be gauged by his play habits. Here in America we pursue whatj leisure* we have with frightful vehm- ence. The rapidly grinding wheels of our high-geared industrial organiza, tion seemt to carry their influence over,. :( -a.>9