THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. OCTOBER 2$. 1028 aTH F. fM1L CV H L V{- 1\ 1./ A> 1 y1S . OC"' + \Y iIYT'414 R 1 ' I :+Vg LV40 - Published 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 pnstoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- toaster General Subscription by carrier, $4.oo; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbo. Press Building, May- nard Street, Phones: Editorial, 4925; Bustnesn, 9as.+ EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor.......................Paul J. Kern City Editor. ,.. ,.. .....Nelson J. Smith News Editor............Richard C. Kurvink Sports Editor...........Morris Quinn Women's Editor.... ......Sylvia S. Stone Editor Michigan Weekly....J. Stewart Hooker Music and Drama......... .R. L. Askren Assistant City Editor. Lawrence R. Klein Night Editors Clarence N. Edelson Charles S. Monroe !oseph E. Howell Pierce Roe'.nberg onald J. Klinc George E. Simons George C. Tilley Reporters I ui L. Adams rris Alexander her Anderson A. Askren tram Askwith uise Behymer thur Bernstein on C. Bovee bel Charles R. Chubb nk ';. Cooper len Domine ouglas Edwards Iborg Egeland berL J. Feldman Ioni Go lmer lliarn Gentry wrence Hartwig hard Jung aries R. Kaufman th Kelsey nald E. Layman C. A. Lewis Marian MacDonald Henry Merry N. S. Pickard Victor Rabinowitz Anne Schell Rachel Shearer Robert Silbar Howard Simon Robert L. Sloss Arthur R. Strubel Edith Thomas Beth Valentine Gurney Williams Walter Wilds George E. Wohlgemuth Robert Woodroofe Toseph A. Russell Cad well Swanson A. Stewart Edward L. Warner Jr.I Cleland Wyllie versity concrete examples of an-I cient culture. The pioneer in the work was the late Dr. Kelsey of the Latin department who through his! archaeological excavations made the University the owner of a good part of this material. Professor Waterman of the Semi- tics department through his work last year in Babylonia brought back a vast amount of this ancient treasure. He has again returned to Babylonia; and within the next five years he undoubtedly will un- earth a great deal more interesting vases, coins, skulls, clothing, orna- ments, rings, bracelets and the like. A pertinent question that con- fronts the University today is what to do with Professor Waterman's material and the rest of the ar- chaeological gems that the Univer- sity owns. Is Professor Waterman to go to Babylonia inspired with the thought that the results of his painstaking labors are largely de- stined for the basement of the Dental school? Does the Adminis- tration intend to leave our proper- ty In Toledo and in Carthage in- definitely? Are gifts and donations for archaeological purposes to be refused because the University cannot use the results of the work, when gotten? Stronger than the need for a geological, paleontological, and bi- ological museum that was felt for years, and that has been so ade- quately gratified in the beautiful building on Washtenaw Avenue, is the need for an adequate place to exhibit the archaeological treasures that the University is so fortunate to own. An archaeological museum is a debt that is owed to Dr. Kelsey, to Professor Waterman, to the other men who contributed their work and experience, and to the men and women of Michigan. Is the watchword to be, thousands for expeditions, but not a penny for exhibitions? Headline - East Won, Hoover Turns West. Just about two weeks ago he turned east after winning the West. At this dizzy pace he will turn to engineering mines aft- er winning the election. The word "stadium" mean "600 feet" in Greek. Perhaps the foot- ball field was named by some one looking down on the gridiron from the freshmen seats. Hoover promises to "call an extra session of Congress so as to secure early constructive action." Aren't you a little too optimistic, Herb? 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, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. o- -O I ABOUT B 0 0 K S O- , -o A NEW "APOLOGY FOR POETRY" When William Ellery Leonard issued the public edition of the narrative sonnet sequence "Two Lives," after private copies and manuscript proofs had been in cir- eulation for several years, the poem stirred up perhaps the greatest storm that has been stirred up by any one poem or collection of poems in the last two decades. A work of stark realism which dealt with the gruelling experiences of a sensitive nature, this book was placed by the critics in every class of good and bad art which it is possible for the imagination to conceive. The greatest issue that was taken with "Two Lives" was the fact that it was written of too-intimate events and written in a too-per- sonal and heart-rending manner. By some of the would-be exponents of restraint this criticism was taken as the final word on the poem, and forever damned it from the realm Music And Drama "DIPLOMACY" I A MUSICAL TREAT BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Department Managers Advertising.................Alex K. Scherer Advertising..........A. James Jordan Advertising............ Carl W. Hammer Service....... ....Herbert E. Varnum Circulation..........George S. Bradley Accounts..............Lawrence E. Warkley Publications..............Ray M. Hofelic Assistants Ifving Binzer Jack Horwich Donald Blackstone Dix Humphrey Mary Chase Marion Kerr Jeanette Dale Lillian Kovisky Vernor Davis Bernard Larson Bessie Egeland Leonard Littlejohn Helen Geer Hollister Mabley *Ann Goldberg Jack Rose Kasper Halverson Carl F. Schemm George Hamilton Sherwood Upton Agnes Herwig eMarie Wellstead Walter Yeagley SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1928 Night Editor-DONALD J. KLINE COME AGAIN WISCONSIN Michigan extends to Wisconsin today the hand of congratulation for a victory long awaited and well earned. Yesterday witnessed a game which will long be remem- bered in the athletic annuals of the tvo universities. It was a game rich in all those qualities which make the American game of foot- ball the fine sport that'it is. Replete with clean, hard playing by two evenly matched teams, it made a contest in which the bal- ance of victory semed to favor first one and then the other team. It was a game which it was an honor to win and equally as a great an honor to lose. The continuation of athletic relations with such a foe as Wisconsin is indeed a priv- ilege to be asked and a desire to be remembered. This editorial, however, must mention many other things. It must pay tribute, and a great trib- ute, to the team which represented1 Michigan. It was a team that' fought against great odds as few Michigan team have ever fought. Michigan may well be proud of her sons in defeat. They gained for heri all the glory of victory. Mention must be made of ai cheering, fighting student body, ledi by the largest block letter cheering1 section in the country, which back-l ed its team and backed it loyallyi from the first kickoff to the lasti gn. Spirit of the kind demon-t strated yesterday is representatives of the true Michigan. Every effortr to maintain it should be encour- aged.l Over a period of four weeks, theI green Wolverine varsity has showed steady and consistent improyement.a Each Saturday has shown it givingi its all and earning in the most de-c serving way, true recognition.- The next week must not forgett that team. It must honor and help it' True recognition during thet next week backedby real demon- strations of Michigan spirit willv see, it is not too much toa prophecy, more wonders workedt with the Varsity eleven. No team can win without sup-o port. The remainder of, this sea- son is going to witness games whicht are won or lost on support alone. If it is Michigan's to give, there need be no odds given and nob apologies made for the Wolverines of 1928. o .b ARCHEOLOGICAL RESEARCH ( In the basement of the main Ii- , s DEFER RUSHING? To the Editor: Your editorial of Friday, Octobe 26, would lead us to believe that The Daily is in favor of a deferreC rushing plan which from the point of the fraternity would be entirely impractical. Certainly, there are enough fraternity men included or the staff of The Daily to know that such a plan as to delay all pledg- ing until after the first semester is closed -or until after spring vaca- tion would be, to say the least, un- satisfactory. In the first place, such a, policy would merely be weakening the fraternities in that they would be connected with three instead of four classes. By this, I do not mear that it would be weakening them "politically," so to speak, but the first year men in a fraternity are naturally not very strong members because they are new to the mem- bers, the customs of the house, and unacquainted with the duties of a fraternity man. For that reason there would be only two years of actual fraternity life left to the average college student. In some cases there would be a financial problem to consider for that very reason. The question which arises is, if a deferred rushing rule were put into effect, would all fraternities obey it to the letter? The chances are, they would not. What would there be to prohibit freshmen from carrying pledge pins around in their pockets for a few months until the time limit expired? There would be nothing, and in all prob- ability the -same amount of "cut- throat" rushing would be going on, pledging to be done by promise .nly. From the standpoint of campus tradition, about the only freshmen who even know what they are, are those men who are made to abide by them by their fraternities. In general, fraternity freshmen 'are the best behaved of the yearlings bcause removing over-doses of "cockiness" is one of the best de- ireable functions of a fraternity. SX - /- William E. Leonard of good art. The classic sentence in which Robert Frost (who is cer- tainly a much better poet than he is critic) summed up Leonard's book was hawked all over our own. campus as a reasoned judg- ment-much to theadisgust of those people who felt that it would take a little more than clever phrasing to dispose of the book and its place in the letters of America. "After all," said Mr. Frost, in comment on "Two Lives," "it isn't very good taste to go around in one's under- wear." After "Two Lives," came "Loco- motive God," which was an attempt on the part of Leonard to "write out" the phobia which possessed him after the world turned against him. It was written in the highly personal "stream of consciousness" manner and it attempted to trace the evolution of a consciousness which was later to be put to the test in the crisis of Leonard's life which formed the material for "Two Lives." I And now, in the latest work from Leonard, "A Son Of Earth"~* we have the collected poems which are arranged to form a poetic auto- biography of the author. They range from the earliest bits of poetry he essayed to the last which he has done, and they have a range which is surprising. Fables, trans- lation, biography-all of these find their place in the work. One of the most interesting poems in the book is "The Lynching Bee," in. which one finds a manner which is sim- ilar to that of Edwin Arlington Robinson at his best, and is, all in all, a very wonderful piece of work. But the most pleasing thing in the whole work is to be found in the sonnets which have been previ- ously omitted from "Two Lives." In these one finds' the critical apology for the writing of "Two Lives." These constitute an adequate an- swer to the critics, and they prop- erly express those sentiments that have always been held by those who felt that the sonnet sequence was one of the greatest, if not the greatest poetical work that had ever been produced in America. In these sonnets one finds that Leonard believes that "Two Lives'' emanated, not from the white heat of the tragedy, but from the hard- ening and reflective process which followed it. His own words say it better than we can express it: "Yet is thei story mine . . . because the pain . . Was mine . . . the mastery of pain Tuesday night of this week offers the double attraction of the Thea- ter Guild's production of "Porgy" at the Whitney and the Comedy Club play "Diplomacy" by Victorien Sardou at the Mimes Theater. In presenting the Sardou play Comedy Club are maintaining the high standard of their program while at the same time offering a really amusing and thrilling show. Sardou's work is of the teeter-tot- ter school of theatrical writing which has as its aim the creating' of moments of high theatrical sus- pense and then of resolving them surprisingly and amusingly with witty and satirical dialogue. Sar- dou is a master of the Scribean technique and "Diplomacy," with its background of diplomatic intri- gue and its brilliant dialogue is considered as his masterpiece. For assistance in the production, Comedy Club has secured the ser- vices of Miss Phyllis Loughton and Thomas J. Dougall. These two, graduates last year and remember- ed for their work in campus-dra- matics-Miss Loughton in Comedy Club and the Junior Girls' play, and Dougall in the Union Opera- and Comedy Club-have assisted in the direction of the play. So much of the significance of the play is carried in the innuendos suggested by "business" that direction as- sumes almost the rank of creation and the experience which these two bring to the task assures the fact that "Diplomacy" will be a suc- cessful interpretation. The cast, previously given in full in this column, includes Lorinda McAndrews, Charles Peake, Robert Adams, George Preihs and a num- ber of others. R. L. A.l * * * "PORGY'S NATIVE TONGUE" A Dissertation On Gullah, the . Negro Language of the Play By Dorothy Heyward Co-author of "Porgy" "Enty yuh yeddy huccum Porgy ma done title um 'cause dat niggah hyam tummuch fish?" "Co'se 'e yam fish an' 'e nyam yam! Keep yuh mout' off Porgy 'fore uh loose mah han' an' ongiz- za'd yuh." These are the first words of the play "Porgy." They are spoken every night from the stage, but no- body has to bother about them, for they are lost in the general medley of the opening scene. We had written in our stage direction: "As the curtain rises, revealing Catfish Row on a summer evening, the court re-echoes with African laughter and friendly banter in G u 11 a h, the language of the Charleston negro, which still re- tains many African words. The au- dience understands none of it. Like the laughter and movement, the twanging of a guitar from an upper window, the dancing of an urchin with loose, shuffling step, it is a part of the picture of Catfish Row as it really is-an alien scene, a people as little known to most Americans as the people of thel Congo. "Gradually it seems to the audi- ence that they are beginning to understand this foreign language In reality, the Gullah is being tempered to their ears, spoken more distinctly with the African words omitted." And thus the whole of the play becomes a trans- lation. For the language is now so thoroughly tempered to the Northern ear that, should it ever fall on the astonished ear of Por- gy's prototype, he would never know what it was all about. In describing Gullah as "The langauge of the Charleston negro" we are far more concise than ac- curate. It is the language of the people with whom our story is con- cerned; a promitive, little-educated group-type of colored people who inhabit the sea islands and a nar- row strip of the coast of South Carolina (including Charleston.) This region is known as the Black Border because the negroes vastly outnumber the whites. The word' Gullah, according to a widespread but not undisputed theory, is a contraction of Angola, the African district, a Portuguese colony now- from which the Gullahs are said to have come. It is different from the Virginia negro dialect-which has become the standardized lan- guage of the negro in fiction-as it is from the most conventional King's English. For instance: "W'en onnah du de-dey, de dee duh no de-day; w'en cona yent dey, de dee, duh de-dey." That was the reply of an old darky when asked by a hunter if a certain stand were good for deer. It means, "When you are there, the deer is not there. When you are not there, the deer is there." I I PAUL and his sixteen aristocrats of modern dance music. DANCING eight to twelve MONDAY NIGHT $1.50 per couple Dancing will begin promptly at 8 o'clock for the benefit of those affected by the University closing hour. Huron St. Tickets at Sl ater's Subscribe to The Michigan Daily at GRANGER' S MONDAY NIGHT OCTOBER 29 ThEMAINE 0 urn... EEUuanuarUUUE WAGPWER& COMPIIl Jor T/n Aawce14 &- i 'N Ilifl [ rr il bI1 iJ * 9I.,,o ii l 1 1 i was mine . . I And mine the shaping instinct and endeavor: This were Arts right of eminent I domain, Even had that house, on seal and line, Not cancelled the ties . . . all ties .. with me forever." This book constitutes another in r- ,a .-raa+ . -f rinl , rof n ap ar $60 Youir Newu Winte-r flv~1rrrta r