PACE PFOUR THE MI.CI1IGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1929 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Westera Conference Editorial1 Atsociation.e The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwiseX credited in this paper and the local news pub- dished herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ana Arbor,l Michigan, so second class matter. Special rate of postap granted by Third Assistant Post-I master General. Subscription by carrier, 94.00; by mail, I4. o ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- bard Street. Phones: Editorial, 49:2; Business, 2=214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4922 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Eotor .......................Nelson 1. Smith City Editor............. Stewart Hooker News Editor............Richard C..Kurvink Stp orts Editor.............W. Morris Quinn women's Editor..............Sylvia S. Stone Telegraph Editor............ George Stauter Music and Drama............R. L. Askren, Assistant City Editor...........Robert Silbar Night Editors Toseph E. Howell Charles S. Monroe Donald J. Kline Picece Rosenberg Lawrence R. Klein George E. Simon George C. Tilley Reporters! Paul L. Adams Donald E. Layma Morris Alexandal Charles A. Lewis C. A. Askren Marian McDonald Bertram Askwith Henry Merry Louise Behyme' Elizabeth Quaife Arthur Bernstei Q Victor Rabinowitz Seton C. Bce Joseph A. Russell. Isabel Charles Anne Schell L.R. Chubb Rachel Shearer Frank E. Cooper Howard Simon Helen Domine Robert L. Sloss Margaret Eckels Ruth Steadman Douglas Edwards A. Stewart Valborg Egeland Cadwell Swansea Robert J. Feldman Jane Thayer Marjorie Follmer Eiith Thomas William Gentry Beth Valentine Ruth Geddes Gurney Williams David B. Hempstead Jr, Walter Wilds Richard Jung George E:. Wohlgemuth1 Charles R. Kaufman Edward L. Warner jr. 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Although the Hawley-Smoot tar- iff bill is still unsettled weather in the legislative skies, there has emanated from Washington enough debate to indicate tha the primary purpose for tariff revision is not likely to be served. The tariff bill, in fact the entire extra-session, was designed in compliance with a much propaganded Republican pledge to aid the farmers. But the present tariff proposal will go far from placing the farmer in the se- lect position tha the campaign car- toons pictured him. The Hoover tariff promise was in- creased duties on only agricultural cpmmodities, guaranteeing that farm "equality with industry." When the bill emerged from the Ways and Means committee, it con- tained higher rates for food stuffs, but the raised were short of the farmers' demands. But even with this slighting, the farmers might have "let well enough alone," and remained quietly at their plowing had not the House raised the duties on a sweeping number of commodities. Textile goods, sugar, lumber, bricks, chem- ical products and other products necessary to the farmer, were also given higher duties. The increased rates on agricul- tural goods are offset by the extra- protection afforded manufacturers. Furthermore, the resulting high prices on building materials, sugar, and clothing will be a greater bur- den on the farmer as a consumer than the increased rates will help him as a producer. The farmers are "kicking dirt," and rightly. During the campaign they were dosed with fluge Republi- can promises, under the influence of which they voted Hoover into the White House. Now it is the duty of the administration to get control of Congress, and make good its promises. Farm relief is-no longer merely a legislative question. It is becoming a moral issue as well. It is the test of the responsibility of the Republican party to meet its political obligations. 1 0 STUPIDITY Three tragedies, each involving the deaths of two or more human beings, were prominent in yester- day's news. In Muskegon two men were killed when a homemade monoplane crashed to the ground, one wing missing. At Inkster, an en- tire family of six were wiped out when the driver of the car in which they were riding tried to beat a sixty-mile-an-hour train to a cross- ing. In the Yankee stadium, New York, two people were killed and many injured when a crazy mob- like dumb cattle-rushed, trampled while endeavoring to rush from the ball park-because it was raining! Blind stupidity. Every one of these tragedies was caused directly by violations of the laws of common sense; by a total disregard of the phrase, "Safety First," which has unfortunately become somewhat hackneyed. Every one of these ac- cidents could have been averted had those who caused them utilized half the intelligence with which man Is endowed. People, it seems, will never learn. While fishing the other day President Hoover stumbled over a rock and received a black eye in a fall against a tree. The black eyes he received last fall were a lot blacker than this one, though. 0 We learn that nearly 1,500,000 people are engaged in the grape in- dustry in France. Yes, and they have the American tourists to thank for that. 0 Every other college and univer- sity seems to be doing it. Who is Michigan prettiest coed? 0 More than 8,000 lawnmowers were shipped this year from Amer- ica to foreign countries. That means we'll have 8,000 less back- aches in the United States this summer. M cdusic and Drama ....... p t..+.M+~.+ l. .+ .. ..+f"+ye...t~e.e.+......+..S..r. ~e............ ee.+ TONIGHT: A presentation of "The Green Goddess" by Wm. Archer in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, beginning at 8:15. with i the curtain at 8:30 o'clock. NEVADA VAN DER VEER smooth, facile thing expectedo of a professional company. . The scenic production was ex- cellent in shape and color and richness. The original form of entertainment during the, acts was questionable. MOUSSORGSKY (mdltiovs Yote.---This is I the first of a eries of artices dealing with such of thc composers and musical tumtbers on the May Festival iro- 11gra1 as we tlink may e of in; e rst to the public.) : ;At times, there arise deeply emo- ..:.. tional and inspirational geniuses who are artists despite themselves and who insist upon creating just as the are moved, without the .^'.:....::>:.: ::;".:":.::::}:;:;::; modification forced upon them by Stheir classical art ancestry. Mous- . sorgsky, ardent radical and im- pressionist in every treatment, may i be regarded as high example of his school (if indeed it may be called a school.) In fact the Slavic race Nevada Van der Veer, the Dutch has produced more untrampled contralto, who wil sing the role of radicalism in the , arts than any "Delilah" in the Saturday evening other people-their emotion andf concert of the May Festival, taking desire for ardent expression runs the place of Marion Telva, orig- so high 'that any mold or channel inally announced.. The substitution is regarded as an imposition. was occasioned by Miss Telva's re- Moussorgsky is not great. Per- haps it is that very disregard for abroad. It was quite fortunate that technique and medial formulae she was available as she has sung which has given him the distinc- the role several times and is cred- ited w tion of being the first musical Ni- ited with being admirably adapted hilist which has kept him from the vocally and artistically for this im-(Parnassus of his m'ore conventional portant part. forerunnoi-e TTohae naccued d 71 .d.r i TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1929 Night Editor-Gurney Williams, Jr. "TIE GREEN GODDESS" A Review By William J. Gorman Only Mr. Archer, with years and years of analysis and dissection be- hind him, could have accomplish- ed the feat of writing a play with- out a scrap of inspiration in the plot conception. Of course it is quite possible-and an infinite number of New York audiences have provec this perhaps more substantially than last night's au- dience-to give up to the prevail- ing excitement, to wipe a moist brow at the Rajah's cruel and most improper proposals to Lucilla, to tremble at the buzzing barbarians silhouetted' againts a burning sky, to shout at appearance of rescue party, with complete collapse, the sign of the play's success, as- a re- sult. That is the privilege of the unsophisticated and they, off course, are responsible for the play's popularity. The more cynical playgoer will be quite confident in Lucilla's pow- er to resist even the most sinister suggestion, and will claim power to time to the minute the arrival of the whirring rescue planes and the smart young 'leftenant' The play Idoes have a throu ahly a nn 7inv of actual deficiency in knowledge and ability of composition. Even if this is false, as has since been proven, the disregard for form is carried to excess in much of his work. This handicap is evidenced by the fact that he excelled in operatic composition and in his songs, very obviously because they offered him a maximum of free- dom in. his expression. Two of Moussorgsky's orchestral songs' will be sung by Miss Braslau in Thursday's concert. The two, "The Classicist" and "On the Dnieper" are widely different in scope and neither are representa- tive of the composer. The wild ex- pression of the Slav in the opera "Khovanschina" - the legendary fourdain with an infiltration of realism which makes it stark; this sponsorship of growing national- ism is -much more of Moussorg- sky than the satirical and the le- gendar'y songs to be offered. After a lull of every forty years since his death in 1881, the Rus- sian radical has had a rising pop- ularity in the last few seasons and his presence upon the Festival program is an indication of the sweep it is attaining. L. P. BI. They are proud of their no- madic life and of their knowl- edge of how it should be ac- complished. After all, if one goes about a bit, a home at- mosphere that is informal and comfortable has its advantages. Evening decollete and dinner coats are not a requisite when one travels to Europe TOURIST Third Cabin. That pretty well describes why the seasoned travelerto Europeoften prefers this class. Then, it has the fea- ture of being very inexpensive, which is a big item in modern travel. Round-trips cost from $184.50 up. 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Automatic water heater and soften- er, Kelvinator, double garage. Lot 8o x 132. Price reasonable; fine terms.:: Y. ht hOUSES AND APARTMENTS FOR SALE AND RENT IN ALL SECTIONS OF ANN ARBOR BROOKS-NEWTON, INC. Brooks Bldg., Liberty at Fourth Ave. ITelephone 22571 CLASS REUNIONISM How to keep alumni interested in their Alma Mater, conscious of their debt of gratitude, and above all, financial assets to the institu- tion, seems to be one of the major problems that face our universities.i One ancient method of accomplish- ing this important end, the class reunion, has just taken a rocking uppercut from a Columbia graduateI telling in the June Harper's why he does not care this year to "in- fest the campus on the stipulated date and do his part toward the perpetuation of a senile American tradition." The truth of the reunion picture he paints, plus the plaus- ibility of his argument, more than half inclines us to agree that the campuses of our colleges in the fer- ment of Commencement should not be "tuned into an approximation of the yard of a British pub on Sun- day evening." The author probably exaggerates the element alcohol in class re- unions, for a good many alumni can enjoy a visit to their Alma Mater, be immensely, but withal genuinely,, cordial cold sober, and stimulate more youthful days without a "bath1 in a Scotch-flavored fountain of temporary youth." But the author is dead correct about the hollow pre- tense with which the majority of alumni indulge in rum and riot, be- lieving implicitly the doctrine that those who have been exposed to education togethertmust henceforth be fife-long brenthren. He points out brilliantly that reunion commit- tees cannot tour our Amreican genius for mass production to pro- ducing sentiment for dear old Alma Mater; this sentiment, if it is to be real and valuable, must be a sub- jective creation of the heart and not a surrender to reams of mimeo- graphed invitations. President Little, before his ideas began to be coldly received, wasj feeling after a solution to the alumni problem. He sensed the shallowness and inadequacy of the class reunion, and tried to substi- tute for it an intellectual contact with the University. Few have ever gained more than a hazy notion of what his Alumni University was to be, but this much every one could understand: that it aimed to pro- duce alumni loyalty on the basis of the permanent, rather than the .. . . -, ELCTi V rim ox T - .-,I ~l li"Y the modern prospector proclivi pectati fortuna dred fE from c Archer' stage. ordinar intellig and exi in the logue i knowlet expecte lator o never1 aeropla thrilling Of co creation neer a This d cruelty, of a cc convers sophist "The G other b Perhapa in the Raja's babies. makes well--s1 damned The p ing, wa Reynol rendere ancy a] the rigl Rajah< sary ar very fir derson, Ministe valet, v had soi natural domesti g Av av y g InON JUAN ity for fulfilling all ex- Tue favorite love t ie n of the ons, even to Watkins' un- Tefvrt oeteeo h te "sheer drop of a hun- nineteenth century is constantly' eet." The play is saved! found iAthe musical literature of emet.Te anayissyvMr.the period. It is rare that a con- omplete banality by Mr. cert series of any length is done 's keen instinct for the without one of the compositions ylte has made a stupidly drawn from the genius attracted to y plot the vehicle for some its possibilities. The May Festival ent writing. The entrances will contain two, perhaps th e t re superbly well-planned examples of the them: Mozart's Sardou manner. The dia- Don- Giavanno; and the Strauss is generally vigorous. But tone :poem, Don Juan. dge of the theater was to be Although Strauss now occupies. d. Mri. Archer, the trans- the somewhat pitiable position of f the grim old Ibsen, will aI uia eouinr rw be forgiven for writing of a muicg revolutionary grown conservative through the advance ne wrecks, sheer drops, and of the contemporary field, this g rescue parties. same corposition was the storm )urse, there is that delicious center of his period. Written when' n, the Raja of Western ve- he was -aid upstart of twenty-four, ,nd ultra-Himalyan heart, the fam iis tone poem is not at all, elicate combination of wit, characteristic of the fluency and 1 1 and culture is somewhat mature coloration of the later ompensation. His brilliant Strauss. It shows very clearly the ation in the thoroughly un- influence that Mozart, Beethoven, icated surroundings gives Berlioz, and Wagner had upon the lreen Goddess" a tang that young composer. He is not quite ad melodramas don't have. sure of his radical psychology, the s the most satisfying thing later solidity and emotional-tone whole play is delightful color are but suggested in the escape from Lucilla and her splendid continuity and terseness His pretty piece of Stoicism with which he develops his theme. a delightful curtain:b"Well, le refuses to be decoratively con- he'd probably have been a ventional even in his early orches- A nuisance anyway." tral experiments and upon a con- production, at least the act- ventional theme. The polyphonic as curiously unprofessional. structure, the fearless use of seem- ds Evans, as was expected, ingly discordant transitions, the d the Arliss role with pli- sympathetic and radical treatment nd precision. He gave just of the material at hand; all are in- ht quality to the sinister dications of revolutionary im- and maintained the neces- pressionism which has been since. tificial tone of voice with a universally accepted. In Don Juan e degree of success. Hen- he goes to poetry to obtain the too, as Watkins his Prime emotional pitch he desires from a r, cocktail shaker, and kindred art, in combining voiceI was adequate, though he with orchestra he attempts nothing, me difficulty in bending his new, but he dares to stress the ly heroic physique into a narrative as well as the lyrical c one. Miss Freeman' s iiiomine. ;a r ' 4 ".. , .r :. jt /'1 / t II ! i'1 { '' N I i.e t2 STOUT heart; a burro laden with pick, :shovel, and the bare necessities of' life; and-the-pros. pector vas ready for the gold rush'-Sutter's Mill; the Pike's Peak country, Cripple Creek, Klondyk. A scattered trail of . half-worked claims markcd his sacrifices. To-day mining is a business, with electricity replacing wasteful brawn in mine and rnill, The deep mine, with electric lights, hoists': and locomotives; the surface mine with huge electric shovels scooping up tons of ores in a"single bite; the concentrating mill with its batteries of elec trically driven machines; the steel mill with its conr stant electric heat-here are but a, few of elec- tricity's contributions to the mineral industries. So in every industry, electricity increases produc. tion and cuts costs. It is the modern prospector. leading the way into wider fields and tapping undeveloped resources-that we may enjoy a finer civilization and a richer, fuller life. - i !. E _ ,.. it Editorial Comment i DEATH-CONTROL; (The New Yorker) We look for a law prohibiting the use of the new pocket tester for liquor. We would like to see our government remain consistent ini its attitude about life and death.! If it's a crime to give birth-control information, it ought to be a crime to give death-control information.' Nature, having endowed us with the mvovtrinus ohilit t in norn lifo rnd ..r.....w. ' ! q.....R + y . . 4. .1, / 'fib.. , . ; + ;fib " ( .* ' ,is M''"f*a... a... .,, -.,,, . ,, , ,- , _.. . , . Y a m You will find this mono gram on powerful motors that drive heavy mining; machinery and on tiny, motors that drive sewing machines. Both in indust and in the home it is the. mark of an organization.a that is dedicated to elec. trical progress. 4. .r '-p