r&er porn. 'THE MICHICAN DAILY TMC rTAY, TTtAf-lY la, l2 10®q '9 ® - ,m .. ght Atdijotg On Bil Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board m Control of Student Publications. 1_ .__._____M_~ ._.w_ . i Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news1 dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- . lisped Herein.' Entered- at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, ssecond class matter. Special rate of postag' granted by Third Assistant Post- Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- hard Street. Phones: Editorial, 492 ; Business; 2214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor............. ...Nelson J Smith City Editor ......J. Stewart Hooker News Editor............Riehard C. Kurvink Sports Editor..............dir. Morris Quinn Women's Editor..............iyvia S. Stone Telegraph Editor..............-eorge Stauter Music and Drama..............R. L. Askren Assistant City Editor..,........Robert Silbar tNight Editors loseph E. Howell Charles S. Monroe -Donald J. Kline Pierce Rosenberg Lawrence R. Klein George E. Simons George C. Tilley Reporters Paul L. Adams Donald E. Layman Morris Alexandf, Charles A. Lewis C. A. Askren M Arian McDonald Bertram Askwi"t I Henry Merry Louise Behyme Elizabeth (,uaifs Arthur Bernste'e Victor Rabinowitz Seton C. Bovee Joseph A. Russell Isabel Charles Anne Schell L. R. Chubb Rachel Shearer Frank E. Cooper Howard Simon Helen Domnine Robert L. Sloss Margaet Eckels Ruth Steadman Douglas Edwards A. Stewart Valborg EIeland Cadwell Swanson Robert J. Fldman Jane Thayer Mnriorie Follmer' Edith Thomas William Gentry Beth Valentine Ruth Geddes (Guruney Williams David B. empstead Jr. We!ter Wilds Richard Jung George E. Wohlgemuth Charles R. Kaufman Edward L. Warner Jr. Ruth Kelsey Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant )4anager--RAYMOND WACHTER Department Managers I Advertising...............Alex K. Scherer Advertising....... ..A. James Jordan Advertising................arl XW. Hammer Service.................. Herbert E.Varnun Circulation...... ..George S. Bradley Accounts.............Lawrence . Walkley Publications ................ Ray M. Hofelich Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words it possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, uponere- quest. Letters publish-ed shouldnot he construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. o 010o 0 Ab o ut B oo ks iiMusjc And Dramatrgs..Spis A GREAT EXPERIMENT I THE FACULTY CONCERT * *Repairs I "CLEAN SIDEWALKS!" To the Editor: With growing mistrust, we have watched conditions daily become more dangerous and provoking, the latter especially, as we had had im- plicit faith in your ability to pre- sent our case, namely, cleaner sidewalks. We have endeavored to assume an optimistic atti- tude, but as you have failed to secure for us an immediate solu- tion, which we believe the case ne- cessitates, we have decided to write again. It is our purpose, in this epistle, to suggest to you sev- eral means by which the sidewalks might be cleared in a very eco- nomical and facile manner. In common with thq majority of Sthe students on this campus, we have encountered many courses in which text books are recommend- ed, but never referred to, in the supposed studies. It is our sugges- tion that you, as Editor of this paper, send out a general appeal -for these unused volumes, stress- ing the fact that they are to be used in this very 'worthy cause of cleaner sidewalks. It would, in all probability, be advisable to explain that these texts are to be soaked in oil and ignited along the walks. With such a conflagration and consequent rise in temperature, it is quite likely that the ice wolild melt. If such an appeal were di- rected, we have no doubt but that there would be a ready and tre- mendous response, for there are many unused texts in the courses mentioned above, wherein stu- dents so often study the professor, obtaining a complete knowledge of his eccentricities, his children, and the type of breakfast food that ap- pears on his table in the morning. As the subject matter of these courses is but seldom referred to, there would be no actual diminu- tion of scholastic standards. IDoubtlessly, some few will object to the expense of this practical method of cleaning the sidewalks on the campus, but youthave only to remind them of the current prices that are paid by the book stores for old texts. The element of personal glory for you lies in the fact that you. might be one of the last of the editors who could use such a method, for it is conceivable that the University might acci- dentally come to face its own text book problem. We realize that you agree with the foregoing, but have been trou- bled by the question of the disposal of the water that would be ex- pected to collect on the walks. Now, it cannot well be left exposed to the freezing atmosphere peculiar to this section of the country at this time of year. Therefore, we wish to present the solution, which I we have decided is the most ex- peditious. Why could you not use the diplomas that are to be given to this year's graduating class? You,.as a member, appreciate the obvious fact that they will be placed behind pieces of heavy fur- niture in the attics of the recipi- ents almost immediately after pos- itions are secured. Is it not bet- ter that they be used to mop up the aforementioned excess moisture? The Committee, Per A. W. L. '29. Anyone familiar with the theatre Sunday afternoon the University I i familiar with the name and the Symphony Orchestra appeared in accomplishments of the brilliant the fourth of its Faculty concerts, young Eva Le Gallienne, actress, I and in doing so it presented a manager, director, owner, and, in series of numbers surprisingly -well fine, a sort of maiden df all that done to create what was on the has to do with the sock and the bus- whole a very pleasant hour and a kin. They will recall her triumphs half of music. as an actress, her interesting tour The War March of the Priestswha with a repertoire of the plays of from "Athalia" was most strangely Ibsen-and they are watching at and consequently most badly done. present her interesting efforts It emerged from under Conductor with a civic repertory theatre, at Samuel P. Lockwood's baton as a which select plays are given at a piece written in the most barbaric price slightly less than the cost of rhythms and yet rendered with a a new suit or a quart of Three Star graceful lilt that would suggest; Hennessey. war was a matter of tea and roses. And now she has published "Eva Sherman's epigram, coined during1 Le Gallienne's Civic Repertory his famous march to the sea, seem-I Plays"*-a volume which contains Ied to have been ignored.I the acting version of four of the The Clarinet Concerto that fol-I more significant plays produced by lowed was unfortunately no less her in her new theatre. The plays unsuccessful, but for a different that are contained are as represen- reason. Mr. Falcone showed him-' tative of the efforts of a progres- self a skillful artist on the wood-; sive theatre as anything imagin- I wind and in command of a rich able. There is Ibsen's "Hedda tone of considerable flexibility Gabler"; Goldoni's, "La Locandi- which he used to great effect, bud era"; the interesting "2x2=5" by the orchestral background was not Wied; and "Three Sisters" from modulated to the not too powerful the inimitable Chekhov. These piping of the solo instrument so four plays are a great testimonial, that the result was a dispropor- not only to the worth of the the- tion of uninteresting background atre she has established, but also drowning out a beautiful solo in- to thel value of this volume to stu- strument. dents of the theatre. The remaining number of theI But, even more important, this program, with Mr. Albert Lockwood book contains an introduction and solo at the piano were considerably complete -direction notes from the more effective. The Saint-Saens pen of Miss Le Gallienne. The Rhapsodie emerged with consider- notes are so brilliantly written, able fire, which shifted effectively and the conceptions are so clear into the de Falla tone picture suite! and new that this book becomes al- of gardens in Spain, and ended most indispensible to the student brilliantly with the Liszt Fantasia who is interested in the viewpoint on motifs from Beethoven's "RuinsI of an actress on the producing of Athens." Pianist Lockwood is "game." For here is an actress in control of a rich tone which that not only has views-but she 'does not suffer quenching from his has made them work! And she has manual flourishes which recall at her command a theatre which Rachmaninoff. is every day becoming more impor- An interesting feature of the tant to the future of the American program was the German Fairy theatre. Miss Le Gallienne and Tales collection by Bendel, the or- the peerless Ethel Barrymore stand chestration for which Conductor S.I at the head of the actresses today, P. Lockwood was responsible. Great and this record of the development originality was shown in instru- of productions is an invaluable ad- mental combination to convey the dition to the too-small store of mystic sense so fundamental in for all Musical Instruments Sohaeberlo &Sari MUSIC HOUSE 110 S. Main St. New York Listed Stocks Private wires to all Markets Conservative margin accounts solicited Brown-Cress & Co., Inc. Investment Securities Telephone 22541 7th Floor Bank First Nat'l Bldg. - %1 °.I I. ° 'c °Jai., ° °.. ° . 's , , _' . 8 ., J .A f± i . ' . ".sFr. ".a . ,' ";fide, .r?, .ed vRJ®rd !!/ .P_,/ ,../! '.P° .PP.. -- ---ra. r .. .y ,y a Spring Shoes in new shapes and colors. The dark brown Scotch grain is proving, v e r y popular. Our "Big Ten" shoes are famous or service. $10.00 ~WiI1EiCOMPA jbr 7 en9nC(2164& Mary Chase J,"eanette Dale Vernor Davis Bessie Egeland Sally Faster Anna Goldberg Kasper Halverson George Hamilton ack Horwich Dix Humphrey Assistants Marion Kerr Lillian Kovinsky Berpard Larson Hollister Mabley 1. A. Newman jack Rose Carl F. Schemm George Spater Sherwood Upton Marie Wellstead Night Editor-JOSEPH E. HOWELL TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 19291 BACK TO BISMARK The financial and political crisis which at present is confronting the German Republic with sinister! foreboding brings a cry from the reactionary German middle-class for a dictator} to lead them from the chaos and impending doom which threatens them on every side. And now, when the rnation is unable to meet payment on the billion dollar reparation fee which is due, the Reichstag lies perilously on the brink of dissolution. If the time is not ripe for a dictatorship, parliamentary government, at least, seems about to become an . institution of the past in Germany. Political leaders in the Reich- stag have expended more energy in political squabbles than in the process of honest efforts to solve the financial dilemma that is so omnipresent. The people, there- fore, have lost confidence in their parliament, and what is worse, that body has lost confidence in itself. * With the apparent collapse of the Reichstag has been formulated a nation wide zeal for a dictatorship of a rigid and positive sort. Sundry groups have selected their cham- pions for the post, many of whom declare they will win their way with . machine guns if necessary. The people seem eager for the change and many of the leaders of the various factions are preparing for the kill.1 That Germany needs .the guid- ance of a 'firm and resolute hand which will move free from the re- striction and hindrances of po- litical jealousies and petty party peccancies is certain. Drastic change is imminent, but the change must not be won at the gory cost of civil war. The blind- ing scintillation of the Mussolini ascension to power .must not stig- matise the calm foresight of the German people. Economic, po- litical, and financial freedom can be won for the nation, but it must be won with sure; steps of cautious1 preparation, unhurried by the flush1 of excitement so characteristic of th Ltin hlnA int- mAtivated- T authentic stage lore in America to- , fairy tales * while still keeping a day. N j strong sense of reality in the de- 'By Eva Le CaMenne; W. W. Norton & Co., scriptive passages. .New York. . * * The unity which the orchestra RUSSIAN THROUGH RUSSIA has achieved thus far in their sea- The American mania for com- son guarantees that succeeding programs will be fully worthy of pression, which received its intro- consideration. duction to literature via that IR. Leslie Askren. catalogue called a five foot shelf * * of books, and to journalism via the MORE ABOUT "THE VIKINGS" tabloid, seems to intimidate every Critics everywhere have agreed one who puts anything into print. that Thomas Wilfred's extraordi- It does not seem to encourage nary production of Henrik Isben's writers to be concise except in the "The Vikings" to be presented here physical bulk of their output. The on March 14 and 15 in Hill audi- limitation of size has apparently torium, is- one of the things at the had no other effect than to chop present time which holds most off chapters. possibilities for revolutionizing The author of "An American I theatre technique. Tragedy", of all people, ought never During its production last spring to have tried describing a civiliza- in Chicago, where it broke all rec- tion in anything more confined ords at the Goodman Theatre, than an encyclopedia. Possibly the "The Chicagoan," said in part, sort of person that he is never "One thing has happened during should have tried to describe a the past fortnight which may be civilization at all. But since he has classed as significant. It means done it without as much as a self something. In the terms of after- conscious query whether he was dinner oratory, 'it marks an epoch,' suited for the job, the point is al- and maybe even 'makes history.' It most nothing but an item for swas the use of Thomas Wilfred's gentle curiosity.-s color organ in the staging of Ib- Almost nothing; however it does sen's "The Vikings!" explain the prime deficiency of the "The Clavilux," the "Chicagoan," book." Dreiser has obviously seen continues, "itself is not a novelty- too much and written not enough. Thomas Wilfred, its inventor, has It is somewhat more debateable, been exhibiting it in 'color organ' but still fairly clear, that he saw programs for the past ten years. It too many things and not enough of has been copiously praised and any one. ecstatically marvelled at by search- Dreiser is always something of a ers for aesthetic thrills. But its journalist, and here he is more of a value as a practical instrument in one than might be desired. He has stage lighting, one which enlarges done what Ivy Lee and the other the visual..technique of the thea- professional publicists have done: tre, has never before been tested. divided Russia into so many Topics, "So far as the theatre is con- devoted so many pages to each, at- cerned, there is nothing high-brow tached a certificate of truth and or hyper-aesthetic about Mr. Wil- probity, and handed it forth as an fred's invention. Its use for 'color authentic description of the real organ' programs and as a light ac- thing. Without the vision, or the companiment to symphonic music capacity to discover Russia as have apparently obscured the fact I Dewey has caught it for the New that it is something of concrete Republic, he has been content to value in the production of plays. turn out a good newspaper feature It is as simple in theory as a magic all about New Women and Eco- lantern, but as supple in its pos- nomic Reforms and the Russian sibilities as an artist's imagina- Temperament a n d Agriculture tion." Problems. Wilfred's unwillingness to permit Well, no use to carp, however his invention of the Clavilux to be much we may have expected of used by outside producing groups, Dreiser. After all, his point of except when subject to his own view is worth something, and his absolute control has kept the color I honesty still more. He is rather organ still a novelty and an un-! more careful, less gullible, and known factor in the dramatic arts.: less smug than most people who Essentially a mechanical thing inI have compiled books about Russia. its operation, Mr. Wilfred has He is certainly out of his 1-nM'i- i P 1.-.,-'.,.,n4 Inn .r ,.anh ti_ ti ( c ,rrr .r. . .r., rrrr. rrrr. . errrirrr.,.rrrrr-rrr. .rt. r:-rr.,r.,: .,, .,, ..r-..; .., rrrr., .r. :r.. .. .r.,r .r.,rrr.. .r. rrrrr,,, I Editorial Comment FOOTBALL CHANGES AGAIN The Chicago Tribune The new football rule is intended to minimize the advantage of get- ting the ball after a fumble. Under the old rule a man on the defen- sive side who picked up the fum-I bled ball was permitted to run with it. Under the new rule the ball is down at the point where it is re- covered. This is not a spectator's rule; it deprives the game of one of its ex- citing elements. It is- not a rule which players, as a class, have de- sired or suggested. Fundamental- ly, it is a coach's rule. It is intend-' ed to take some of the hazards out of football. When a coach has a powerful team, as all coaches have at one time or another, he wants to be certain of being rewarded with victory and he doesn't want the bungling of some youngster on the field to deprive him of what he is entitled to. SNA ot l t he heh' foxnr tht One way to trap a beaver Not everybody in the Hudson's Bay Com- pany was a trapper, any more than everybody in the Bell System is a telephone engineer. The Hudson's Bay people trapped a good many beavers in the company offices, where the skilful financing and careful business man- agement served to back up the men actually on the front Pines. Organized activity suc- ceeded then just as it does today. The men who put up telephone lines can work the better because back of them are other men who pains- takingly design and make their equipment, and still other men who correlate all these activities- into a smoothly meshing plan. ' T--% Y Y f1 N ' *' ,r i 1 -m Ar