PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY T U aI AY FEBRUARY it,'-1020 PAGE FOUR '1'HURSDAY F~flIVCXARY ~ .... . . rublished every morning except Monday during the University year by 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 credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished 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, $ Ofices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editoral, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor .................Nelson J. Smith City Editor..... . . Stewart Hooker News Editor............ Richard C. Kurvink Spirts 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 Yoseph E. Howell Charles S. Monroe onald J. Kline Pierce Rosenberg Lawrence R. Klein George 9. Simons George C. Tilley THE BATTLE GOES ON Prohibition was onec more brought to the fore on Monday when the two oratorical giants of the United States Senate, James A. Reed, of Missouri, and William E. Borah, Idaho, clashed over every phase of the eighteenth amend-j ED I jT ROLL THERE'S GQLD PILLS IN TII ,M Music And Drama I TONIGHT: Comedy Club presents "Take My Advice" by Elliott Les- ter, in Mimes Theatre, beginning at 8:15 o'clock. F4 QUALITY.$ c. 0 oer 4, 2I- ' . 4 < . ,. { + ; Paul L. Adams Morris Alexande C.' A. Askren Bertram Askwi.x .Louise Behyme Arthur Bernste u Seton C. Bovee Isabel Charles L. R. Chubb Frank 1'. Coopcr I elen Domine Margaret Eckels Douglas Edwards Valborg Egeland Robert J. Feldman Marjorie Follmier William Gentry Ruth Geddes David B. Hempstea Richard Jung Charles R. Kaufma Ruth Kelsey Reporters Donald E. Layman Charles A. Lewis Marian McDonald Henry Merry Elizabeth Quaife Victor Rab inowitz Joseph A. Russell Anne Schell Rachel Shearer Howard Simon Robert L. Sloss Ruth Steadman A. Stewart Cadwell Swanson L Jane Thayer Edith Thomas Beth Valentine Gurney Williams ad Jr.. Wrter Wilds George E. Wohlgemi'th an Edward L. Warner Jr. Cleland Wyllie ment before galleries crowded to ( Exactly 450,000 Old Golds have capacity with the forces of the W. been dragged around the campus C. T. U., and the anti-Saloon'in the past two Weeks. Three lec- league. ture series have been discontinued Reed left nothing untouched Ibecause the speakers fear the ter- when he tore through everything rific epidemic of coughing that is methods of prohibition, and the expected to afflict the student body from the principles of the law to at any moment. peculiar thing about it all was that ** * 'almost all of his statements, espe- "Well," said Oscar, Polls Wonder cially his charges relative to en- Horse, in an interview late last forcement methods, were true. He night, "some one slipped me the then referred to methods used in blindfold test. He put Old Golds securing the ratification of the into my bin instead of hay and I amendment by reading. the public didn't notice the difference until I confession of William "Pussyfoot" started coughing." Johnson in which that reformer admitted that he lied, bribed, and THE ROLLS EXECUTIVE BOARD, cheated in order to put prohibition IN RAN EFFORT TO FIND OUT over. tWHY OLD GOLDS TIRE THE That method of making amend- TASTE, TORE ONE APART YES- ments to our constitution cannot TERDAY AND PROVED BEYOND lead; to a successful legal code, nor SHADOW OF DOUBT THAT THEY can a system of laws passed under such conditions command the re-U AREN'T GOOD FOR YOUR INNER spect of the American people. TUBES. About the only defense offered w were some rather derogatory re- marks as to Mg Reed's personal character, delivered by Sen. Thad- deus H. Caraway, of Arkansas, and 4 question as to whether the in- dividual states could do better in * regulating liquor traffic than the In order to halt a possible fraud federal government, put by Sen. among the student body, Rolls has Borah. The latter offered no con- endeavored to obtain a specimen crete suggestions as to methods of of the type of cigarette distributed effectively enforcing the prohibi- around the campus. We examined tion amendment, but simply asked the contents and found silver that all public officials, as part of threads among the gold. their duty, see that it was properly * * * enforced. He made the statement And of course, boys and girls that neither he nor his colleagues you heard about the Scotchman on would live to see the day when that the campus who registered thre part of the constitution was re- times this semester that he woul pealed.. have free smokes all year. If enforcement is to be made ef- * *, * fective it will be almost necessary Now that the Old Gold company from a moral standpoint to repeal his originated the idea of passing either that or the bill of rights., free samples of their product abou Beside inflicting a financial injus- the university campuses, some cig tice upon the people of the state, hette factory should try it, that, together with other reform bills is taking away the personal A liberty for which our country was MANOFCTIE OF "THE TRNAS supposedly founded. By taking URE OF THEM ALL" iS PICTUREI away the revenue from liquor taxes BELOF ANDM EXLL ISC H and spending huge sums for farcial BELOW, AND EXPLAINS Wi enforcement attempts, that law is OLD GOLDS CAN BE IDENTIFIED working a second injustice on the IN THE BLINDFOLD TESTS. people of the United States. Campus Opinion BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER AdvrtiingDepartment Managers dertising.............Alex K. Scherer Advertising...........A. JamesJordan Advertising............... Carl W. Hammer Service...................Herbert E. Varnum Circulation................. George S. Bradley Accounts ............... Lawrence EB. Walkley Publications................Ray M. Hofelich * 1 * YELLY D'ARANY A Review by Herbert S. Schwartz Chiefly to be remembered of Miss D'Aranyi's concert is the abomin- able accompaniment that distorted everything it accompanied; a brief !surcease was afforded by the Bach' Andante and Gavotte foi the violin alone. It seems strange and un- reasonable that an artist of Miss D'Aranyi's caliber should be so careless of so important a matter. I Literally and musically there was absolute lack of blending. The pianist for the most part seemed to be quite unaware that a violinist who was, or should be, the master of the situation, was playing. Mere subduing of tone is hardly adequate recognition of the fact. The re- viewer cannot recall a single in- stance where the attack was syn- chronized. In the more intricate passages the accompanist seemed , to be out of breath in her mad en- deavor to hold the pace; when she could more easily cope with the situation,. she was utterly absorbed with her own none too musical self- expression. Violinists are notori- ously careless of their accompanists but they all, seem able to choose one who can keep together with s them. It may be excusable for a violinist to play with someone whose musical intelligence out- shines his own; the compdrison r might be unprofitable; but any comparisons suggested by last night's performance were only odious. Apart from this self-imposed e handicap Miss D'Aranyi showed d herself to be a very acceptable violinist. She played with very pleasing tone (if not a luscious y one); the quality of her G-string g was quite accurate, her phrasing t generally in good taste, her shading - sensitive; there was more than ample technique. More than this cannot be said. One did not feel E any overwhening intensity o the reserved discrimination and bal- I ance to which such intensity somv i times matures. There was a little d of everything; enough to make an exceptionally good violinist-but I nothing more. Miss D'Aranyi should I make a marvelously good player of chamber music (if she chooses more capable assistance than she did for this performance). The program was too shot and the key too monotonous. There was too much centered about D major and nearly related keys. The Vitali Ciaconna was very successful. t While it could not be said that there was any great breadth in this performance, any remarkable feel- _ ing for larger outlines, the smaller n parts were done with such appar- m ent delicacy and taste that one readily excused this deficiency. The same might be said for the Bach f Andante and Gavette. To the third group, consisting of short violinistic r pieces was done well enough; the r music was charming in an inconse- quential fashion. '®U Johnson's Electric Waxer $29.75 (or for rent by the day) Old English or Johnson's Wax 65c per lb. 4' QUJALITY. 4, Jno. C. Fischer Co. Q6 . t G Kitchen Furnishigs of All Kinds Such as Gas Ranges, Enameled and Aluminum Ware, Dinner and Glassware, Electric Goods of All Kinds, Paints, Varnishes, and Polishes. '1 .- ; r-- I V'~ UALT. ,~Q ° /QUALITY. 'j;1jQ Q 'I (1 fN 1, r 54 t A., Mary Chase J eanette Dale ernor Davis . Bessie. Egeland Sally Faster Anna Goldberg Kasper Halverson George Hamilton Jack Harwich Dix Humphrey Assistants Marion Kerr Lillian Kovinsky Bernard Larson Hollister Mabley L .A. Newman Jack Rose. Carl F. Schemm George Spater Sherwood Upton Marie Wellstead Night Editor-GEORGE E. SIMONS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1929 THE COMING RENAISSANCE For some time the world of edu- cation, particularly higher educa- tion, has been looking for some sucker to fire the opening salvo in a campaign to reserve college training for the fittest. President Little tried it last year and got for his pains the damnation of faint praise and the dubious honors of martydom. A heavy precipitation of conservatism dampened the fuse on his University college project. The cause has recently found an- other young champion attacking albeit from a lowlier point of van- tage, but undeniably attacking. The new champion is Headmaster Wen- dell of The Hill, progressive ad- ministrator of a leading prepara- tory school, who has dared to tell parsents that their sons would do better in other fields of endeavor than college. He says to parents, in substance, "We can probably train your son to pass college board examinations, but we know that his chances of staying in college are slim. We will liberalize his courses, but we advise against his going to college." For this heresy Headmaster Wen- dell, unlike Heretic Little, has re- ceived no damnation, some praise. One more than likely reason for his survival is that he broached his radicalism in the East where thought is less smug. Then, too, he was only giving official articu- lation to rumbles that have long been heard in other preparatory schools such as Hotchkiss, Taft, St. Paul's, and Choate. The idea that only a part of those who can enter should go to college is unquestionably due to spread. It is one of those funda- mental and apparent truths, long unpropagated, that will be accept- ed during the educational renais- sance soon to follow the present dark age. Its acceptance will be manifested in harder entrance ex- aminations, smaller enrollments, fewer half-baked graduates, and University colleges gently weeding out the palpably unfit before they have squandered four years trying to assume a cultural veneer. Eventually the principle that higher education should be re- served for the fittest will be applied in practice as commonly and natu- v~nlltr no "-......gni 1..1i4nrl }y YOU'LL find that Kellogg's Pep Bran Flakes are better bran flakes. There's nothing like that peppy flavor of PEP or that unusual crispness. Try these better bran flakes. You get the nourishment from the wheat. Just enough bran to be mildly laxative. Order some today at your campus cafeteria or the fraternity restaurant. Made by Kellogg of Battle Creek. PEP BRAN FLAKES .j t) l . r s . l 1 r I i . s l i a j ontributors are asked to be brief,j confining themselves to less than 300 j words i possible. Anonymous coin- !I munications will be disregarded. The names of conmnunicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- que.st. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. "STEP OUT OF SUNLIGHT" To the Editor: That most recalcitrant and impi- T ous of man, Diogenes, who would' find unimpeachable honesty and truth, was once confronted by Alexander the Great at Corinth. Asked by the youthful Uebermensch if he could oblige him in any way, the Cynic answered, "Yes, kindly step out of the sunlight." I humbly compare myself to Di- cgenes in certain searchings I wculd make and questions I would ask. I hope that because of my taste for truth, I may not seem recalcitrant' impious or idiosyn- cratic. For I am only following the custom established by this delight- ful shocking, Cynic of earring the lamp into far corners. Besides,. what others say of such a proced- ure does not matter much, as it has never mattered. The subject of my questionings is near to the studenxt.< hearts. In all recent discus ion upon it, this faat was fcrgctten, and President Little's resignation or removal was deemed a state concern, a Board of Regents' concern, an Ann Arbor Landladies' concern. Basically (or ideally) it is the student's concern. He is the one who is being educated and trained; he should have some few words to say about the dis- missal or appointment of his intel- lectual Mentor, to whom he has intrusted not merely a house and the teaching of a Telemachus, but the sanctity of an intellectual out- look and an intellectual develop- ment. For it is vital to me to' know whether I shall be guided by the hand of a Little, a GlennI Frank, or a Meikeljohn; or by thef hand of the political boss' friend whose only recommendation to so do is his wish for a sinecure; or by the hand of an ex-president of the illustrious United States who brings with him an extraordinary ability to read typewritten speeches and "All is not gold that glitters, rasped the cynical senior as he li a Chesterfield. This idea of the Old Gold com. pany is really a humanitarian move. It keeps the boys fron smoking cigarettes. * * * "Old Gold--The Treasure o Them All." Well, ' they taste a though they had been buried fo a long time. + * * THIS EXCLUSIVE PHOTO O TOASTY-ROLLS' MASCOT-WA SNAPPED IMMEDIATELY AFTEI THE OBSERVANT PUP HAI PASSED A FRATERNITY HOUSI WHERE 25 TINS OF OLD GOLD HAD JUST BEEN DELIVERED. If all the Old Golds delivered t students on the campus wer placed in a pile, they would with out doubt fill that great big Uni versity incinerator plant. An that, doubtless, would be by fa the best way to smoke them. * * * The most popular cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fra- ternities are made by Kellogg In Battle Creak. They include Pep Bran Flakes, ALL-BRAN, Rice Krispies, Krumbles, Corn Flakes and Kellogg's Shredded Whole Wheat Biscuit.-Also Kaffec Hag Coffee -the coffee that Icts you sleep. PER P BRAN FLAKES WHEAT KLGMCOMPANy w'oe I , 11 'That 47th Ls, S R D E S t0 e 1- 1- d r t'4AKE MY ADVICE" A Review by Paul L. Adams "Good Heavens! Another com- plication!" When Joseph Weaver made this remark in the third act of "Take My Advice," he did it with a sincerity which might well be a criticism of Comedy Club's latest effort, for the play is just that-a series of farcial complica- tions which makes good entertain- ment if, nothing more, because of the cleverness of the lines. Most notable among the cast was Alfred ;Foster' who was assigned the rather difficult part of play- ing a seventeen year old boy in love, and did it with success. The nature of the play caused most of the parts to degenerate into bur- lesque, and this was true of Mr. ' Foster as Bud Weaver, but he did it with a consistency and a certain ( measure of seriousness which com- bined to make his work the most outstanding of the evening. Jeanette Dale as Mrs. Weaver also did more with her part than one might have hoped from a readin! of the play. As the wife of a long suffering husband, she was realisti- cally irrdtional, charming, ava yet capable of arousMg our symipathit's for Mr. Weaver. Charles Pea ke, i)) the importaifl. role of Professor 'leeinnt, who acts as a sort of combination of Sher- lock Holmes and master of cere- monies, was rather of a disappoint- went. His lack of adequate facial and voice. expression, seer in occe).- .4.. 1vyn -s~ ~riu i i ...,.i f Iprovement ... Pressureless Touch Geo. S. Parker's latest, in the Modern 2'igreaterDuofold-aids college I ink capdcity, work immensely size for size, than aver- aer- bfS.IThink of this: A pen that's 28% age pen.lighter than rubberyet this light 'EN'weight alone is all that is re- quired to start it writing at the fix st touch of the point to paper. And keep it writing 'smoothly, evenly and beautifully at any speed! Finger-pressure is relieved! if No bearing down! No effort! 1I Merely guidance fromyour hand -the pen itselfdoes all the writ- I ing for youa And none of the interruptions orintrusions that any other kind of pen has ever caused before a gliding, smooth response that clears the track for THINK- ING, thus producing BETTER, thoughts for class-room or home work. So smooth and cven that all I '~jpapers take iuk botter fro it. ,11This is aeo. S. Parker's 47th Improvemnient in a founoain pcn, known as Parker Pressurcle5s Touch. 1 11 ' n ?IvI ..~u" FRANK: DID YOU GET- YOUR TIN OF OLD GOLDS? EARNEST: NO; I WAS OUT WHEN. THEY ARRIVED AND- FRANK: I KNOW; I'M A FRA- TERNITY MAN TOO. ~ * * The result is the most able pen you've ever used-a. pen we *guarantee forever against all defects so its benefits to you are everlasting. T.pry it without obligation at any nearby pen counter today. All dealers are glad to have you demonstrate it to yourself. Other Parker Duofold features are Barrels of Parker Permanite, Non-Breakable, Ink-Tight Duo-Sleeve Cap, Non-Leakable, Choice of Five Flashing Colors and New, Modern, Black and Pearl, the Latest Mode. Every genuine ParkerDuofold Pen or Pencil is stamped, "Geo. S. Parker---'DUOFOLD," onthe barrel. That is there for your protection. See it when you buy Tae rAI'kJrLN ComrANY. JANIySVILLE.WIS. UI'C 15 ANDSBSIDIARIE S: NrIV YOK * CHICAGD " ATLANTA T+1i:VUA1 ) * PALL AS *SAN FRANCISCU TONUN1. S A r;AAA'LON4DON. NGLA1I1L Un Well, what would YOU a case of Old Golds? do with GUMILEY and LARK