PACE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,.._.________ ------ .. - - ______-.------______ _____- -~.-.-.--. --.-- -~ Published every morning except Monday luring the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Coaference Editorialj 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- ished herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, °Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $450. Offces: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- card Street. kPhones: Editorial, 4925; Businesq, 12,. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH 0. PATRICK Editor.............Paul J. Kern City Editor... ...... ,.Richard.Nelson I. Smith News Editor.............ichard C. Kurvink Sports Editor.................Morris Quinn. Women's Editor.............. Sylvia S. Stone Editor Mchigan Weekly... .J. Stewart Hooker Music and Drama...........R. L. Askren Assistant City Editor ...Lawrence R. Klein N Clarence N. Edels Joseph E. Howe Donald J. Klinc George Paul 1I. Adams Morris' Alexander Esther Anderson C. A. Askren Bertram Askwith Louise Behymer Arthur Bernstein Seton C.. Bove Isabel Charles L. R. Chubb Frank X Cooper Helen Domine Douglas Edwards Valborg Egdland Robert J. Feldma Marjorie Follmer William Gentry Lawrence Hartwig Richard Jung Charles R. Kaufm Ruth Kelsey Donald 1. Layma ight Editors / son Charles S. Monroe 11 Pierce Romberg George 1. Simons C. Tilley Reporters 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 t Beth Valentine Gurney Williams n Walter Wilds George E. Wohigemuth Robert Woodroofe goseph eA. Russell Cadwell ASwanson nan A. Stewart Edward L. Warner Jr. an' 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.............. Carl W. Hammer Service.................Herbert E. Varnum Circulation...............GeorgeFS. Bradley Accounts..........Lawrence E. Walkley Publications..............Ray M. Hofelich Assistants Irving Binzer Donald Blackstone Mary Chase JTeanette Dale ernor Davis Bessie Egeland Helen Geer Ann Goldberg Kasper Halverson George Hamilton Agnes Herwig Walter Jack Horwich Dix Humphrey Marion Kerr Lillian Kovinsky Bernard Larson Leonard Littlejohn Hollister Mabley Jack :Rose Carl F. Schemm Sherwood Upton Marie Wellstead Yeagley TUESDAY, NOVEMBER ' 27, 1928 Night Editor-DONALD J. KLINE ENTERTAINERS AND SPQRTSMANSHIP Is this local amusement business conducted with an eye to the good! will and entertainment of the stu- dent body or is it merely a good thing for the Butterfield interests? Is there such a thing as good will between a business enterprise thatf has become nearly a public utility! in this community and the student body which supports it? Last Saturday night at the Mich- igan the theater was packed to the roof by students in a more or less hilarious frame of mind. There was nothing damaging or obscene about their actions-in the least. Their football team had won a spectacular victory over a suppos- edly superior foe, had played its greatest game of; the year, and the students of Michigan were pleased to the point of enthusiasm. The act came on to the stage. The tremendous audience thund- pred applause. Each little gesture of the performers was accompanied by a response from the audience many times more entertaining than the spectacle of the stage. There were no insulting remarks made to actors or any signs of dis- approval. Rarely has a dancing act received the attention from the audience that was given to the first number of "Earl Lindsay's Re- vue" on Saturday night. During the second scene the audience co- cperatively joined in several old American folk songs. After the second number some immaculate gentleman came on the stage, ac- comjanied by the usual terrific applause, and when he gained It- tention announced that "it was up to the audience whether the act would go on." The audience roared applause. He waved his hand, with a superior air jan- nounced that the "Earl Lindsay Revue" had a "long hop to Louis- ville" to make; and the curtain came down. Now this type of thing may be in keeping with the show business some places but college students resent it the night of a great foot- ball victory. There was no dis- order other than enthusiasm, and no threatened damage of property. Today the Butterfield interests in our hearts for some time, that the "Earl Lindsay Revue" showed poor sportsmanship at the Michi- gan Saturday night. 0 ARE WE CENTENARIANS? The founding date of the Uni- versity has apparently foundered between the waves of the alumni and the ice-bound rocks of the Re-I gents. With the University ap- proaching what most people thought to be its centennnial an- niversary, certain alumni have stepped forward in the interests of hoary age to declare that 1817 is the official date of the founding) of the University, and that the! Board of Regents has no authority or right to establish 1837 as the date of founding to be placed on the seal. On the other hand came unsupported rumors that the only reason why the Regents set 1837 as the date was that they were mad at the alumni for poking around, and did it in spite. This however, has been almost con- clusively proven as being entirely false and without basis. There are valid arguments for both sides which have been pre- sented through the columns of The Daily and in other newspapers many times. Little attention has been- given to the effect of each, however, especially in regard to the student body and the student mind. The main argument advanced by the almuni supports 1817 as the date, thus placing the centennial in the background. Have not the alumni realized that if 1817 were accepted there -could be no proper celebration for the centennial: no homecomings, no big parties in De- troit, no jubilation over having seen the Alma Mater nass the 100- year mark successfully? If 1817 were accepted, football games would be the only reason for cele- bration on the part of the alumni. On the other hand, 1817 would bring the sesqui-centennial nearer, 1 the alumni body would be swelled by several thousand, a larger cele- bration would ,be feasible, and the University would be nearer the great goal: a second Harvard or Princeton. In this, Michigan would have the jump on other Western schools and could have 150-year- old ivy on. its temples instead of 130-year-old ivy, when 1967 rolls around. jCampus Opinion Cnontribtors are asked 'tobe brief, confining themselves to less than 300 word ii possible. Anonymousaco- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should nt be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. SATURDAY'S SIDELIGHTS To the Editor: Never have I followed a Michigan team with greater interest than I have this fall, and never have I witnessed a more stirringly mag- nificent comeback on the part of a Michigan team. After Saturday's game against Iowa, now unforget- ably glorious football history, I felt that never, even in the dim point-a-minute days, has Michigan been more worthily represented on the field. With that as a preliminary, I1 hope that the following statement won't seem altogether "wet blank- et," or make me out a grumpy per- fectionist. But two details of Saturday's spectacle appeared to me to mar the complete harmony of that memorable occasion. These details had to do with the wel- come accorded our Iowa rivals by the Michigan band and the Michi- gan rocters. First, with Iowa's band absent, why did not our own band play the Iowa "alma mater," as well as our "Yellow and Blue," between halves? Would not that have been appropriately friendly evidence of our sporting spirit? We could still have expected, couldn't we? to have our great team return the sec- ond half to rush Iowa off her feet! Again, why couldn't-or didn't our yell leaders, at least once (before the game or between halves) give a yell for Iowa, with handclapping instead of "fight 'ems" at the end? That greeting to the enemy in our midst would not, I am sure, have softened Michigan morale. .I Possibly these two points are trivial and easily explained away. But because I believe football con-s tests should foster closer relations between sister universities, and be- cause I am a Michigan man proud of Michigan's sporting tradition, I was disappointed Saturday at the absence of any gesture of welcome fa our visitors.T Next iNovtmh~r W oAsTED OLL LARK STRICKEN ON EVE OF ~~~ART~ BULLETIN Late Monday Afternoon: Lark, editor of Rolls and well known campus diplomat, fell in love late this afternoon and threatened to run a sentimen- tal poem in this column. Rolls Board of Control immediately removed him from his position. The affliction came on sud- denly and it was rumored that a member of The Daily Wom- en's staff was responsible. Those familiar with the situ- ation hold this to be impos- sible, however. The following column was prepared by Rolls executive committee as it should have been written by Lark. When last seen, Lark was sitting in a half stupor in the corner of the office, idly crooning deli- cate sentiments to himself. * * * THE COLUMN FOLLOWS: WOMEN TO HOLD JITNEY DANCE THANKSGIVING DAY For ten cents any male person of the University will be allowed to dance with any feminine stu- dent at the annual Thanksgiving Day party to be held Thursday aft- ernoon in the Women's field house. * * * . The price is alleged to be a bar- gain. * *.* Women students will wear tags giving age, weight, height, sex, color, and telephone num- ber, it was not stated by the committee in charge. Tiny Petie, chairman of the com- mittee, has announced food as part of the additional enter- tainment. * * * No extra charge will be made for dancing with freshman girls. * * * "The advisors of women will be present," Tiny Petie failed to state, "in order to curb any possible riots. No charge will be-made for danc- ing with the deans, on the scale that co-eds are worth ten cents per dance." "All the good looking girls on the campus will be there," said Tiny Petie. "I have called both of them personally." * * * It was deemed as peculiarly fitt- ing by Rolls executive committee yesterday that the party is to be held in the Women's ATHLETIC building. * * * "The party will be strictly a couple affair," said Tiny Petie again, "A couple of hours." 1 ** * Music And Drama After College TONIGHT: In Hill auditorium, BUSINESS Paul Whiteman and his or- EADESHP chestra in Jazz concert, at LKEESHRO 8:15 o'clock. Each day we feature a 50c Luncheon Service Tea Leaf Reading "Gratis" We will be closed all Thanksgiving Day * *1 * "SHIFTING SCENES" Thursday afternoon, in the Uni- versity series of lectures in Natural Science auditorium, one of the most fascinating of the younger personalities in the theater will give a lecture on the shifting pan- orama of the European stage. Mrs. Hallie Flannagan spent the year; 1926-27 as a Fellow of the Gug- genheim Foundation traveling abroad and studying the advances and innovations in the theater. Her trip took her through England, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Den- mark, Latvia, Russia, Czecho-Slov- akia, Austria, Germany, Hungary, Italy and France. Particularly the Russian theater with the new tech- nique developed out of the desire of the Russian people, with their newly acquired ideas of freedom, to breakdown the barrier of foot- lights, has fascinated Mrs. Flan- nagan. "The Red Theater" is her treatment for the situation appear- ing as an article in "The Saturday Review of Literature" for May 5, of this year, and incorporated as a chapter in her new book "Shift- ing Scenes of the Modern European Stage." Mrs. Flannagan found her in- terest in the theater absorbing her as an undergraduate at Grinnell college, Iowa. Returning as an in- structor in English she was con- nected with campus dramatic ef- fort there until she enrolled with Prof. George P. Baker in his "47 Workshop." Vassar college then enlisted her services until 1926 when she secured the Guggenheim Fellowship, and commanded them, on her return, making her Associ- ate Professor in English and Di- rector of the Vassar Experimental theater. Her book, which left the press: only the 17th of this month, is a record of her observations of dramatic technique as she has seen it in her travels, put in the form of monographs on the per- sonality and methods of the domi- nating characters of the European theatric scene. .Beginning with St. John Ervine, who since has been called to the New York "World" as dramatic critic, her book runs through an extraordinary gamut of personalities including Gals- worthy, Lady Augusta Gregory, Gordon Craig, Meierhold, chief reg- isseur of Russia's revolutionary theaters, Stanislavsky, Karel Capek, author of "R. U. R." among other things, and Luigi Pirandello, to say nothing of a host of other innova-; tors and masters in their own dramatic field. Not at all tech- nical, her book is provocative in the questions it asks our own stage.! Her lecture here, based on thej material in her book and more particularly on the Russian revo- lutionary theaters which have been Mrs. Flannagan's chief inter- est, promises to be fascinating as her book and charming as her per- sonality. "Shifting Scenes of the Modern European Theatre," by Mrs. Hallie Flannagan. Coward McCann, publishers. $3.50. R. L.A. .5 * * ARTISTIC JAZZ This evening, -those curious to hear jazz, the American contribu- tion to music to date, played with a more serious intention than to provide noise and rhythm for the "jazz mad" youth of today,. will have an opportunity to do so at, Paul Whiteman's concert in Hill auditorium. Whiteman, who aims at a serious interpretation of jazz music as well as to please the public, will play two numbers which are something more than arrangements of popular music. The . first of these is "Metropolis" by Ferdie Grofe, one of Paul Whiteman's own discoveries. White- man and his staff aided the com- poser in the orchestration of this number which is an expression of the modern and the American. The second notable number will be George Gershwin's "Concerto in F." Gershwin is probably better known for his "Rhapsody in Blue." "MISTRESS OF THE INN" Thursday . and Friday nights of this week and next the Harris Players present "Mistress of the Inn," a costume comedy translated! from the Italian of Carlo Galdoni. The story deals with the diffi- III 3011/ South State Street The Which Path, W~ill You. Follow To the left - a path of uncertainty, guesswork and error on which you may never reach success. To the right-a path of confidence, ac- curacy and knowledge that should guide you to business leadership. If you choose the path to the right, Bab- son Institute can serve you-and serve you well. AND now is the timcrto act. Sew d for Booklet! Every College man who is ambitious to succeed in business should read our book- let Tainin fo usnes Leadrshi. It explains in detail the work given, the unique features of our course in business fundamentals, and how leadership is achieved. A copy will be sent free. Mail this Coupon Now! r Subscribe WALK SOFTLY, AND- 0 After all one can't expect Tiny Petie to know what SHE I would do in the case of Mary I Gold. -o 10- * * *o It was positively denied by some- one besides Mrs. W. D. Henderson that the following has been selec- ted as an inscription for the en- trance to the new Women's League building: "Honor the League Brigade- Oh what a charge they made!" * * * The really smart idea, figured out by Rolls Executive Committee in Plenary session as of the Agenda of November 29, would be for each male student attending the party to take a feminine per- son who is worth ten cents a dance (providing such can be found). Such an arrangement, also, would eliminate any protests against the Women's League for short change on this ten cent idea. An Open Letter to Tiny Petie: Have you invited the federal liquor agents to your party? Signed: Curious.. BULLETIN Lark is still very low. Rolls Executive Board. * * * BULLETIN 9:30-Lark revives momentarily from state of coma. "Run some- thing about my girl," said he, and relapsed. * * * BULLETIN 10:30-Lark revives again with much stimulant. 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