?ACE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAllY SUNDI~AY. VElC Tu. 2.? 192' , - ' - F - - - -- _ _ -_ _ _ Ci. .F } 1/1=i\.-i.':l Yl l-71'314 fig 1a71Gi? Published every morning except Monday luring the University year by the Borard in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press istexclusively en- raled 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 pnstoffice 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, #4.50. ffies: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- Phone: Editorial, 4925; Busmesq, 32s,. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor................... . P.Paul J. Kern Cit Eito.............. .Nelson J. Smith News Editor.............Richard C. Ki'rvink Sports ditor..................Morris Quinn Women's Editor.............. Sylvia S. Stone Editor Michigan Weekly... J3. Stewart Hooker Music and Drama............R. L. Askren Assistant City Editor......Lawrence R. Klein Night Editors Clarence N. Edelson Charles S. Monroe boseph E. Howell Pierce Romnberg onald J. Klinc George E. Simons George C. Tilley Reporters Paul,. Adams C. A. Lewis sMorris Alexander Marian MacDonald Esther Anderson Henry Merry C. A. Askren N. S. Pickard Bertram Askwith Victor Rabinowitz r4ouise Behymer Anne Schell Arthur Bernstein RachelsShearer Seton C. Bovee Robert Silbar Isabel Charles Howard Simon L. R. Chubb Robert L. Sloss Frank '1. Cooper Arthur R. Strubel H elen Domine Edith Thomas Douglas Edwards Beth Valentine Valborg Egeland Gurney Williams Robert 3. Feldman Walter Wilds Marjorie Folmer George E. Wohlgemuth William Gentry Robert Woodroofe Lawrence Hartwig loseph A. Russell Richard Jung Cadwell Swanson Charles R. Kaufman A. Stewart. Ruth Kelsey Edward L. Warner Jr. Donald E. Layman Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE AMsistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Department Managers Advertising.........Alex K. Scherer Advertising................A. James Jordan Advertising.............. Carl W. Hammer Service'................. Herbert . Varnum Circulation............. ..George S. Bradley Accounts..............Lawrence E. Walkley Publications...............Ray M. Bofelich Assistants Irving Binzer Donald Blackstone Mary Chase ,eanette Dale ernor Davis B~essie 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 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1928 Night Editor-CHARLES S. MONROE THANKS, DOCTOR LITTLE Landladies, the student body, and other interested groups have con- ceived the idea that President Lit- tle does little else but address bodies on birth control, university problems, and the students' duty to the citizens of this great com- monwealth. The quotation has be- come current that the students of the University of Michigan are the "people Little forgot." How welcome therefore was the short note which appeared in last Thursday's Daily addressed to the editor, but intended for the stu- dents.. In this note, President Lit- tle thanked the students for heed- ing and taking kindly to his plea not to disfigure campus buildings with paint at the time of class games, and commended them for their attitude toward the no smok- ing regulations in the buildings., It is probable that the campus has forgotten that President Little once asked these things in a con- vocation, early this Fall. The im- provement is noticeable, however, ahd the result may be traced to the president. But the main thing to be gathered from this note is that the president of the Univer-- sity made a contact with the stu-, dents themselves; not with the alumni, the landladies and real estate dealers, the citizens of this great commonwealth who pray nightly for the students at the University, and wealthy and influ- ential men and women. President Little has temporarily returned to direct contact with the student body in general, and while even at the time of the publication of the letter he was on his way East for another long absence, he deigned to dip into student mat- ters without an eye out for the advancement of any theory. FROM EXPERIENCE In a recent issue of The Daily a quotation from Professor Mat- thews of the School of Forestry, and Conservation, asserted that our hardwood forests are being used at a rate of four and one-half times the rate at which they are being grown. This is another aspect ofj the problem of conservation which which will be required to carry through such experimentation. Undoubtedly Professor Matthews has found the means of relieving an imminent shortage of hard- woods. All that remains is for some authorities to collect various timbers and test them so that they can be ready for use before the actual shortage occurs. The local School of Forestry and Conserva- tion is now entering its second year and it seems that such a proj-.. ect might be worthy of the atten- tion of. research men of that school and bring the credit to our own campus. MR. WILKINS AND MR. BYRD Announcement was made re- cently from New Zealand that all the units of Commander Byrd's Antarctic expedition have assem- bled in Dunedin and are starting on the long trek to the expedi- tion's base in the Ross sea. In Commander Byrd we have the highest type of "modern explorer," one who is a genius at raising funds, one who leaves no stone un- turned to insure the safety and success of his undertaking. His two ships are manned with 80 ex- pedition-members and are full of supplies and materials,-everything that science and enthusiasium can provide to make his trip safe, sane, and comfortable. But some remember a man by the name of Wilkins, a Briton who received some recognition for being the first to fly over the North Pole from America to Europe. The fact that most of the Arctic explorers and world geographers proclaim this flight as the greatest ever made in the Arctic, is largely for- gotten because it was not the first. But let Sir Hubert Wilkins com- plete his Antarctic flight before Commander Byrd, and he will be hailed the world over as the first to make the perilous flight over the South Pole,-thereby tarnish- ing Byrd's crown of glorious achievements. Wilkins is the exact opposite of Byrd. His equipment is an abso- lue minimum. He and Eielson are taking two planes and two men. The expedition plans no base ship, their means of communication are poor, and in case of a forced land- ing Wilkins and Eielson will have to walk out of one of the most barren, windiest, coldest, and prob- ablythe most lifeless regions in the world. These plans are enormous and an arrogant expression of self- confidence. If we regard the Wilkins and Byrd expeditions as in a race, the odds must be about even. But barring accidents, it must be pon- derously in'favor of Wilkins. The elaborateness of the, Byrd camp is too much for speed. Wilkins may sneak out under Byrd's nose and complete his program before the Americans get a start. In all events, it will be an in- teresting race, and one which will be watched with much interest. Whether or not that enormous land mass around the South Pole becomes really useful, remains to be seen. But the future must base its decision. on the work of the present,-on the expeditions of, and the results gained by such men as Wilkins and Byrd. THE TWENTY-THIRD ANNUAL Eight days from today, the twenty-third annual Michigan Opera will commence its Ann Arbor run in the ancient and historic Whitney theater. Standing at the head of the list of college produc- tions given by men only, the Mich- igan Opera has established itself as the leader in pretentiousness, earnings, and expression of college, dramatics along the lines of the musical comedy. Few colleges can boast having had twenty-three such productions as the Michigan Opera, and the successes that they have had. The opera is open to all men on the campus, and those in it usually form a very representative group. It is written by students, played by students, and almost entirely man- aged by students. It is a student production, the equal of which is found at no other time here during a school year. The advent of the Opera has become the one time when the faculty, student body, and alumni may hate a chance to see a typical campus production by which they may note improvement in campus dramatics each year. The audiences have been prom- ised "something" new again this year, in "Rainbow's End." It may be possible. But those who have never seen About Books v -I THE ART OF THE ESSAY There's something about the air or the life of England that breeds essayists-instills in men a feeling for, and about, life which comes 1 onto the printed page in one of the most delightful and charming kinds of literature known to man. The list of English essayists would more than fill this short review, and an analysis of the spirit that j moves them might be the subject of several good sized volumes. If the list were ever compiled it is certain that E. V. Lucas would be well at the head. For he is the intimate essayist at his best. Life to him is delightful, whether it is bringing sorrow or pain. And al- ways it is something significant, something well-worth the medita- tion and the talk of men. The latest volume to come from Mr. Lucas falls well into line with the things that we have come to expect from him. The title gives the key to what is to be found within the book-"A Rover I Would be*" And the essays are the thoughts and the experiences of a true rover of the world-a man who finds life and people in the outlying sections and districts of the world and takes from them and their philosophy something of the secret of. life and the beauty of mere living. The essays concern themselves with travels in England and France. They are about fairs and sales and homes and about peo- ple, and they have all of the quaint spirit that the true traveler finds in such contacts and such experi- ences. But this is more than just a travel musing book. It is colored throughout by the true personality of the man Lucas. It catches him looking at things around the cor- ner and across the street, won- dering how they apply to him. He sees some simple scene that most of us would pass by, and he makes of it a delightful bit of fantasy- a fragile bit of reconstruction that is delightful while it lasts. This truly is an excellent addi- tion to the essays of England. The essay is an art of which we know too little in this country, chiefly because we do not have time to look at life for fear life will pass us by. One of the best ways we know of liking the essay is to have "A Rover I Would Be." It's delight- ful through and through. *by E. V. Lucas. E. P. Dutton and Co. New York. 2.5o. "PASSIONATE BITS OF EARTH AND WATER" A critic has said of Robinson Jeffers that his work is "the colos- sal symphony of a mad Dante." But somehow we can't believe that the word 'mad' is fair to the man. We rather conceive of him as a man who is immensely sane and who, by this very sanity, is able to detect the madness in others and make it play the moving force in his dramas. For that detection of madness is the quality that one catches always in his creations. His people are more than people who simply "are." They are peo- ple who snap-people who move along in a single rut until a crisis comes and then move out to meet life, prepared and armed with nothing but their passions and their imagined strong minds. "Cawdor*", the latest of Jeffer's works, forms the third of the series which began with "Tamar." From "Tamar" he progressed to the creation of "The Women at Point Sur," a tremendous study of half- crazed people who were what they were simply because life was what it was. And in "Cawdor" we have life again as the protagonist. People are bent and torn asunder by the mere machinations of a life that is relentless - and an environment that has fashioned them without their knowing. They live and move and have their being. as if they were people of free minds and strong wills. But life has them, in its grasp, and it is when they start the wrestle with life that the tragedies occur swift and uner- ringly. Besides the title poem there are numerous short pieces which re- veal the power of Jeffers as the master of words and of imagery. He moves rapidly from the plain narrative style to the more diffi- cult and involved imagist style, and as swiftly back again. But; through it all, and with all of the almost weird subjects there is an I immense coherence and force in- herent in every line. C} Q ~ M Misic And Drama "JOHN FERGUSON" Tomorrow evening, those inter- ested in the theatre will have an opportunity to see produced at the Whitney by the Guild company which has been so successful il their productions here this year, "John Ferguson," a play which will be doubly interest'ing on account of the importance it has played in the success of the Theatre Guild, and because of its own merit. From the skilled son of St. John Irvine, this play is not only one of the best examples of the present movement in the Irish theatre, but it is also a fine picture of Irish life and human nature strangely enough combined successfully with a melodramatic plot which when barely told would sound like little more than one of the sure-fire mel- . odramas which are so popular with the tired business man. The character of Jimmy Caesar is one of the most striking in this play wherein all the characters are I remarkable for the clearness and truth with which they are por- trayed. Jimmy Caesar is a coward, but St. John Irvine has treated his character with a sympathy and feeling which is extraordinary for this stock character. Jimmy is a tragic figure with whom the audi- ence is expected to sympathize rather than the butt of farce and sneers. "John Ferguson" was produced in 1919 by the Theatre Guild just as it was on the point of failure. It was immediately a great suc- cess,and ran on Broadway foran entire year which is alone a suf- ficient tribute to its popularity, and the reviews of the critics testify to its merit. Philip Moeller who di- rected the premiere presentation has directed the cast which will appear here tomorrow evening. Their previous work this season is a promise of a finished perfor- mance. PLAY PRODUCTION AIMS Play Production, as it is at present, is in the anomalous posi- tion of being in effect a Little The- ater group, self contained and self sufficient, while at the same time being, classified as a division of the department of Speech. Plays do depend of speech, but it is difficult to see just what form of speech scenery designing or directing con stitute-unless classification. of sacred and profane speech is in- troduced. Any but dull-witted bureaucracy would classify Play Production as an independent unit, having control of its own finances and system of credits, but since this is not the case it has remained for Mr. Windt, director of the group, through his personal quali- ties of friendly cooperation and eager enthusiasm, to achieve the proper aims of his department. The Play Contest which the Di- vision of English is sponsoring is directed at unifying the activities of Play-writing classes with the producing classes in Play Produc- tion. This unification as yet is in no way official. It represents merely Mr. Windt's willingness to provide some form of production for such plays as . the judges of the Play Contest select from the t group submitted, and the kindness of Mr. Rowe, of the Rhetoric de- partment and head of the play- writing classes, in coaching his students in that direction. The Contest, which closes Janu- ary 11, although open to the entire student body, is limited to the one-act play form for the primary reason of coordinating Play Pro- duction's activities with the work in the play-writing course which for the first semester is limited to the shorter form. The secondary purpose is to provide wider repre- sentation of the work submitted. Obviously, a program of three or four one-acts presents a wider ex- ample of local ability than does a single, full-length play. But Mr. Windt's activities will not be limited to a single program' of the best plays. He has offered his facilities for the production, in laboratory of course, of as large a number of student plays as seems warranted by their merit and as his production schedule permits. In this he offers to the literary stu- dent, who has only had the oppor- tunity to visualize his play, the chance to see it projected on the boards as a living thing. And as a further encouragement the author will work with the director in the production, and so will be able to polish and remold the niece a bramol-ii o rimoiev Q1nafypa.- s E I F I i I I i t i i I f f i I I 3 r ! I ,j I ,# , : . , . i i t .1 ; I i .f i. Hickey-Freeman clothes are "customized," meaning : the fabrics are selected by expert woolen buyers who go into the foreign market twice a year in addition to cov- ering the domestic market. Not only do they have access to fabrics formerly confined to merchant tailors, but they have secured exclusive rights to import the finest of these fabrics. 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