R" oUR "IHf E MICT4TIAN i) A T T V . _ Ty.r.. ._ .. - .- .v...ad__ _ ..... ' L' D . ...w 1iJ,' . VGt rublished every morning except Monday during the University year hy the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press' is exclusively en- titled to 'the use for republication of all news dispatches redited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lisped herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, s second class matter. Special rate of postag granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- Gard Street. Phones: Editoral, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor.....................Nelson J. Smith City Editor...............J. Stewart Hooker News Editor............Richard C. Kurvink Sports Editor:.............W. Morris Quinn Women's Editor..... ....... .Sylvia S. Stone Telegraph Editor............George Stauter Music and Drama... . ..... ..... R. L. AskrenI Assistant City Editor..........Robert Silbar Bight Editors oseph E. Howell Charles S. Monroe Donald J. Kline Pierce Rosenberg Lawrence R. Klein George E. Simons George C. Tilleyf Reporters Paul L. Adams Donald E. Layman Morris Alexandn Charles A. Lewis C. A. Askren Marian McDonald Bertram Askwi Henry Merry ,Louise Behyme- Elizabeth Quaife Arthur ternstee Victor Rabinowitz Seton C. Bovee Joseph A. Russell Isabel Charles Anne Schell L. R. Chubb Rachel Shearer Frank E. Cooper Iloward Simon Helen Donine Robert L. Sloss Margaret lckels Ruth Steadman Douglas Edwards A. Stewart Valborg Egeland Cad well Swanson Robert J. Feldman Jane Thayer Marjorie Folmer Edith Thomas William Gentry Beth Valentine Ruth Geddes Grney Williams David R. Hempstead Jr. Walter Wilds Richard Jung George E. Wolhlgemith Charles R. Kaufman Edward L. Warner Jr. Ruth Kelsey Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Department Managers Advertising.. ........Alex K. Scherer Advertising ...... ....... A. James Jordan Advertising. . ..........Car W. Hammer Service ... .......:... ..... Herbert E. Varnhmu rGeorge S. Bradley Accounts.............. Lawrence E. Walkley Publications...............Ray M. Hofelich to organize the "inner" college plan along Oxford-Cambridge lines, as "innovators licensed to peddle their synthetic culture to the univer- sities, colleges, and preparatory schools throughout the country." Almost alone, Glenn Frank has the situation in hand. Nobody can Imake a noise like Santa Claus I around Madison and get his finger into university pie. There is com- mendable courage in taking such a firm stand toward all proffered gifts that merits the imitation of I executives and regents the country over. Michigan must make such a stand before she is qualified to offer, the presidency to a really compe- tent man. 0 BRICK AND MORTAR NOT ENOUGH From Yale comes a warning that the country's universities are fac- ing a progressive deterioration in the quality of their teaching-a warning that might be para- phrased in the familiar words oft uttered by kindly and gray-beard- ed educators, "Brick and mortar do not make a school." The Yale report decries the prevalent ten- dency to expand that is placing a higher premium on new buildings and bigger enrollments than on new talent and bigger brains. There is in this tendency much of the vanity that made Athenians laugh at homely Socrates. It is reflected in an attitude, of which Princeton is among -the guiltiest that a successful president is one who can wheedle the biggest total of building funds out of alumni and other sentimentalists. It is the essence of the recent student out- burst at Harvard, "Val.e Veritas! Ave Vanitas!" (Farewell truth, Hail Vanity) occasioned by the ac- ceptance of building gifts of more than sixteen million dollars. At Michigan; expansion has been the keynote of the last two ad- ministrations-especially that of President Little, who went out of his way to find new fields in which to expand, discarding meanwhile President Burton's promising schedule for increasing salaries. The School of Forestry, additions to the School of Education and the Medical school, the University College, the Alumni University, and most recently the School of Music- all worthy projects, but expensive-~ have eaten up available funds that might have been devoted to mak- ing faculty positions more attrac- tive, and retaining men like Pro- I , - ______________________________________________________ I o~irii - Irr7mrn ? ED IROLLS LARK IS EDIT4R 'p 0 o .Ip PORTABLE 11 Muic A IldDmmaTYPEWRITERS Music An Drama Coronanerwood o Remington, Royals. TONIGHT: Choral Union Concert We have all makes. featuring Sergei Rachmaninoff, Colored duco finishes. P solo pianist, in Hill Auditorium 0. D. MORRI beginning at 8:15 punctually. 17 Nickels Arcade Ph The nature of the Rachmaninoff program will make tardiness very 1 Strings,. . SUpy unpleasant. . . Repairs RACHMANINOFF for all Musical Instru IEPISCOPALIAN I c~'I Irht XTT V Price $60. LL hone 6615 f For the benefit of those who have never read this column before it might be well to explain that this is the official humor column of the paper (Michigan Daily). GetE that-humor column. This is stressed because Lark, the official editor, will not start being offici-I ous until tomorrow, due to the fact that the first column after two weeks of finals and other frivolities is rough sledding, tough going, hard pulling, and wet; and he therefore pats us on the back, murmurs some encouraging stimuli, and lets nature take its course. So we're writing the column, knowing full; plies uments well will boy, We inch( quart that our reputation-if any-I suffer, and his won't. Crafty! Lark is. * * * ll, that's two and a half es gone. Not bad for three nfare of nn hnf Lers of an pour. EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! w -r Rolls Official 3-Hop photo, rushed from the engravers by wheelbarrow. The J-Hop ex- tra's picture might have beaten Rolls' in quantity, and by five days, but this one shows more enthusiasm. The couples here are at least dancing. * * V As one committeeman said td another committeeman, "Thanks for all past due favors." We just thought of a scurvy trick to play on Lark. We might sign his name to this column. The appearance of the world famed Rachmaninoff in recital in Ann Arbor is a high spot in an ex- traordinary anniversary program of the Choral Union Series. Bring- ing with him a sound reputation as an artist of international stand- ing and with it the recent tumult- ous applause of Detroit audiences, Rachmaninoff snould provide an already friendly Ann Arbor audi- ence with completely satisfying ad- venture in' piano music. His program includes Mozart, Scarlatti, Schumann and Chopin, which his virtuosity in interpreting the personality of the composer should make a valuable musical I experience, and closes with his own t "Moment Musicale" and the ever' favorite arrangement, with Kreis- ler, of "Liebesfreud." The Mozart Sonata, No. 14, which opens the program is a long num- ber and the promptness with which the Auditorium doors are closed suggests the advisability, not to say; the courtesy, of punctual arrival. * *' * THE PUPPETEERS ,I One thing that Ann Arbor has come to look forward to as an annual event in spite of the hap-, hazard element of bookings is al puppet show. Last year it was Jean Gros' French Marionettest and Helen Joseph's Puppets. Tlis year a group operating from Yale and calling themselves The Pup- peteers will give two performances Tuesday of next, week. Sponsors of this are the Harris Players through their director, Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson. Schaeberle & Son MUSIC HOUSE 110 S. Main St. Rainbow Tracked to Blue Tin Newton, Ill., Feb. 22, 1928 Larus & Brother Co., Richmond, Va. Gentlemen: The tobacco samples you sent me have been received, and they are great. If you can picture in your mind the lonesomeness of a traveling man in a small town on a rainy night, not a friend in a hundred miles, nothing to do and no place to go: That was the position I was in when your samples of Edgeworth came. It was like a voice from above when I opened the package and got the old pipe steaming. I have smoked various brands of tobacco for the past fifteen years, but never in my life have I found a to- bacco at any price that will equal Edgeworth. It does' not bite the tongue, and a beautiful aroma follows. With the good old friend pipe and a can of Edgeworth you can dream of the rainbow's end. Please count me in the future as an Edgeworth booster. Very truly, (Signed) Al Stanley E dgeworth Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco ASH WEDNESDAY-FEBRUARY 13th. Mary Chase Jeanette Dale ernor Davis Bessie Egeland Sally Faster Anna Goldberg Xasper Halverson George Hamilton Jack Horwich ix Humphrey Assistants Mai-on Kerr Lillian Kovinsky Bernard Larson Hollister Mabley 1. A. Newman Jack Rose Carl F. Schemm George Spater Sherwood Upton Marie Wellstead Night Editor-GEORGE E. SIMONSl WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1929 An ad i informsi "Police p. hey, MAKING A NOISE LIKE fessors Hanford and Frayer. fore all SANTA CLAUS The Yale report indicates that filled. an adequate stabilization, of en- ed Trenchant if a little crude, the n has b ira to wren- rollment has been reached to war- Harvard Lampoon has given the rant investing more income in run- From t world of higher education some- ning expenses and less in extra who con thing meaty to think apout anent I administrative overhead and addi- ed tooth the accepting of donations. The $ tions to floors pace. Scholarly week." idea that any one with, a million brains will inevitably turn to more remunerative fields, where the or so to' give away can dictate poli- Lord knows they are needed, unless Our a cies to a university has not yet been the teaching profession is raised the thin killed, but it has taken a jarring! to an economic parity with other paining uppercut on the chin from a staff 1professions of the same calibre. "That to of student editors. The fact that' omolar," g the blow was delivered by students THE CHAMPIONSHIP ROAD to make gave it added power, for when they From now until tht a twenty third complain of a policy that does not of February, when the Varsity A fellow directly affect their liberties it is basketball team meets Iowa in its on Friday likely to be proof positive that the ninth conference game, the cam- away an a The Lampon's complaint is not pus has no opportunity to see its altogether new-it has. been voiced near-championship team in ac- Nobod byaother nar-ardhan whore-d tion. And then the ovation that sonable1 by another Harvard man whorei will be given the team should be How can cently made front-page copy in in the nature of reception for a away? Ann Arbor. President Little in, team that has gone the rocky tendering his resignation to the road to a conference champion- For the Regents noted that his methods of ship and has had upsets as well as this point dealing with the interests of pri- successes. It should be a greet- the edito vate donors were not consistent ing for a representative group that well to sa with the polcies the Regents deem- has had to fight-and a group humor col ed wise. Patently he had refer- which has met the occasion square- is editor. ence to the recent gift of funds bold facel for a law library to which the donor yThe defeat at the hands of attached several undesirable Northwestern is no measure of the Like this strings. f basketball team. Stick with them who walk: President Little shares with until the last game of the season. are being Glenn Frank of Wisconsin a theory They're well worth supporting. for violati that donors should merely give, the President and Regents dispose. ' A J-Ho This is vital if there is to be any Editorial Comment I woulde consistency in an educational pro- ' Somebo gram. It is doubly vital if the in- "DR. LITTLE'S RESIGNATION" tabulatin terests of faculty men are to be (r protected against the personal ani-(Experim mosities of donors who have money . . . It is an interesting con- ing toward and therefore power. Otherwise flict, but perhaps only a logical tion of a k the relatively poor profession of one, which ranges an undergradu- shells and education would become putty in ate body on the side of a progres- product w the hands of mercenaries too nar- sive president rather than a stand-, row to grasp the broad outlines of pat board . . . . First t a comprehensive educational pro- 0 put the gram. "A PREXY STEPS DOWN" business Unforeseen problems will arise in (The Standard Union, Brooklyn) $7.50 for University administration. ' Their Michigan University's president, settlement cannot await the con- Dr. Clarence Cook Little, has re- "GEORGE venience of a man who once gave signed. His departure is accom- GOWN," several million dollars, nor should panied by unmistakable signs of Michigan. it be colored( by his prejudices. Yet what is known as a huff. It is1 under the system now in vogue signalized by a remarkable state- I "Not ve among needy universities of strik- ment in the columns of a loyal stu- murs We. ing at every golden hook dangled dent publication, which blames the before them, boards of governors loss of the president on "politicians Lark is e are committing their vital policies possessing middle-class, middle- column-or toHio. krin, onr -ivqpinrai iv~irbi- p1Qc. rvvrilAc- rof vvii.c 1"Tf rarI n * * * n the Washtenaw Tribune us that a gent has some ups, eligible to register." * * * d better get started be- I the good courses are ** * he same paper comes the cerning a lady in Dixboro uffering from an abscess- which was extracted last * ' * dvice to ler is to throw ng away if it persists in her. * * * ;oth is hurting molar and roans she. "It's enough anybody cuspid." 4'* o in Chelsea was. y, charged with ,utomobile." * * * arrested "driving y can be more unrea- than a small-town cop. n a car be driven except benefit of those who at have strayed over from rial column it might be y that this is the official Lumn of the Daily. Lark All cracks are printed in letters. s: In Budapest all couples arm in arm on the street fined from $3.50 to $17.50 on of the No Petting law. op week-end in Budapest cost, let's see-heck! dy stole the multiple .ng adding machine. * * * ents are being made aim- d the commercial produc- ind of sugar from peanut cotton seed bran. Thee ill sell for $100 a pound. hing you know they'll sugar refineries out of and we'll be paying a cup of coffee. * * * But whatever credit Yale may feel entitled to for the success of the troupe of Pippeteers, Michigan is entitled to the major and final credit, for Harry Burnett, '23, and, Forman Brown, '22, are Michigan graduates who in their undergrad- uate days (and with the famous Robert Henderson in his pre-Rock- ford days) discovered their talent for puppet shows. While in Ann Arbor these three organized a ma- rionette company with which they spent their week-ends and vaca- tions touring Michigan. For two seasons they achieved considerable success and Burnett's interest was such that Prof. Nelson urged him to study under Prof. George Pierce Baker at Yale with the idea of rounding out his theatrical experi- ence by experiment in other fields of dramatic production. The in- evitable ironic situation arose when Prof. Baker discovered the pup- peteering talent and insisted on de- veloping it. Burnett was successful in obtaining a scholarship for for- eign study. The outcome of this is a unique museum of puppet materials which he was able to assemble in the course of his puppet-exploration tour of Italy. The piece de resist- ance is a complete set of twelve Goldoni puppets which were lo- cated in Florence and purchased finally after considerable negotia- tion. The little figures were used to interpret the Goldoni plays, one of which, "The Mistress of the Inn," was produced recently by Harris Players, and are now on exhibition at the Yale/Theatre. The original costumes, exquisite and excellently preserved, clothe them. Subsequently Burnett and Brown united to give further performances and the object of their present tour, which has included the East, Florida and the Carolinas, and will extend to the Pacific coast, is to gather funds to establish a perma- nent theatre for their art. R. L. A. DALIES FRANTZ RECITAL In a perfectly balanced concert of Bach and Beethoven classics and more modern salon selections Dalies Frantz gave another of his ante-debut concerts to an attentive and appreciative audience last night in the School of Music audi- torium. Frantz' interpretation of Bach and Beethoven was especially bril- a t s A' .4 I I J M' ~D, - - - 'WE-, ~ 455i. - - - 4 I 4 " : .: CHOOS Says the; ery nice of * ,** ditor. This r will be, st WEDDING sign on the1 .4 him," mur- liant, and quite as brilliant was the technic of his flying fingers. Per- haps the most virtuosity was dis- is the humor played in his playing of Bach's xting tomor- ; Adagissimo and Weber's Rondo in 1-1^ ,n~a sbA~ i Mar.rfor hr ewscm I I .A I