THE MICIGAIN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1929 Iulished 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 postofilice 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:. Offces : Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor............Nelson J. Smith City Editor............J. Stewart Hooker News Editor.............Richard C. Kurvink Sports 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 ule-making and avoiding courses already filled have sidetracked him into a number of fields of intel- lectual endeavor where his brain won't function. A hectic first week of the seme- ster follows in which he drops the courses into which he fought his. way through the classification committees. He goes from pro- fessor to professor of the courses he wanted in the first place and convinces them that they will fore- go the pleasure of a lifetime if they refuse to admit him. This re- classification produces more light and less heat. Our suggestion is that classifi- cation be accomplished by inter- viewing professors instead of by threading a maze of advisers and clerks. Knowing thus in advance what to expect, students would avoid a loss of time changing courses at the beginning of the semester. Confusion of records would be avoided by having them hand in their classification cards after they had picked the courses in which they wished to stay. Wait- ing in line would be diminished; fewer wisecracks would be passed by the arch-wits kept standing for hours. 0, S Joseph E. Howell onald J. Kline Lawrence R. Klein George Charles S. Monroe Pierce Rosenberg George E. Simons C. Tilley Reporters Paul L. Adams Ionald E. Layman Morris Alexander Charles A. Lewis C. A. Askren Marian McDonald Bertram Askwith Henry Merry Louise Behymer Elizabeth Quaife Arthur Bernstein Victor Rabinowitz Seton C. Bovee Joseph A. Russell Isabel Charles Anne Schell L. R: Chubb Rachel Shearer Frank E. Cooper Howard Simon Helen Domine Robert 1L. Sloss Margaret Eckels Ruth Steadman Douglas Edwards A. Stewart Valborg Egeland Cadwell Swanson Robert J. Feldman Jane Thayer Marjorie Follmer Edith Thomas William Gentry Beth Valentine Ruth Geddes Gurney Williams David B. Hempstead Jr. Walter Wilds Richard Jung George F. Wohlgemuth Charles R.yKaufman Edward L. Warner Jr. Ruth Kelsey Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Advertising Department Managers Aderisng......... ...... Alex K. Scherer Advertising................A. James Jordan Advertising................Carl W. Hammer Service ..................Herbert E. Varnum Circulation............. ...George S. Bradley Accounts..............Lawrence E. Walkley Publications................Ray M. Hofelich Four thousand pounds of were dumped into ditches Chicago in a price war the+ day. It is a shame to waste thousands pounds of water. milk near other three Mary Chase J eanette Dale ernor Davis Bessie Egeland Sally Faster Anna Goldbeig Kasper Halverson George Hamilton ack Horwich ix Humphrey Assistants Marion Kerr Lillian .Kovinsky Bernard Larson Hollister Mabley 1. A. Newman Jack Rose Carl F. Schenm George Spater Sherwood Upton Marie Wellstead Night Editor-PIERCE ROSENBERG FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1929 WORTH A TRIAL Dean Bursley has put his finger on the crux of the problem pre- sented by the honor system which Phi Eta Sigma is urging for the University college. He ask, "Will it work?" Manifestly it is impossible to ex- amine a cross-section of Michigan student life and abstractly produce an answer, either yes or no, to his question. The answer will not be forthcoming until the plan has been put into operation and ob- served. It will be intensely interesting to those who have Michigan's char- acter at heart, to watch the prog- ress and results of this trial. It will be a searching test of student inte- grity and of student loyalty to the University. It will show, among other things, whether Michigan conceives of a gentleman as one who will speak the truth, and scorn to lie or cheat, or to act other than openly. But the honor system, so-called though it is, when it works, more a spirit than a system, cannot be quickened into life by a formal enactment alone. An earnest and enduring effort by those who shape the destinies of the Univer- sity college must be made to kin- dle a spirit of fearlessness and utter devotion to honor among its students. This devotion must transcend everything, even friend- ship, if the honor system is to en- dure. The task facing those who would introduce the honor system is tre- mendous. Not only must they create a high tradition of honor- able conduct, but they must con-' quer a high-school belief, that has been carried over into many uni- versities, in proctors and the es- sential untrustworthiness of stu- dents. It will be most difficult of attainment, but it will create, as a Harvard professor has phrased it, "a noble ideal toward a better state of life." Most certainly it is worth a trial. 0 "CLASSIFY HIM" With.characteristic ingenuity the Registrar's office has developed an- other new system of classifying lit- erary students. Following out President Little's policy of making new men in the University feel at home, the army of classifiers de-' ploys itself in new formations each semester and changes the rules of combat so that the greenest fresh- man can fight his way into thej The lower house of the Tenessee assembly tabled the bill to repeal its evolution law. Such absurdity must be preserved. The district court of Vilna, Po- land, recently sentenced a man to forty-three years' imprisonment and capital punishment, the joint sentences running consecutively. Michigar jurists and state code reformers will probably welcome this suggestion in its application to heinous violation of the Volstead act. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 3oo words it possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, besregardedtas confidential, upon re- quest. etters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. JUSTICE WITH SPEED To the Editor: There is some justice in one as- pect of your criticism of the con- duct of the recent contest for one act plays. It should be the policy in future contests to exclude the professor of the course in play- writing from the board of judges. In this case, however, his presence did not result in any miscarriage of literary justice. The three of us were (unanimous in regard to five of the plays. The only debate was over which of two dramas should be included, both written by a man who had not taken the course in question. The speed with which the judges came to their decision will aston- ish no one who knows how bad the work of most unexperienced dra- matists is. No prolonged study is necessary for , the detection and elimination of obviously impossible dramatic efforts. It is really re- markable that the first contest should have produced six plays clearly worth staging. Oscar James Campbell 0 OPTIMISM GONE SOUR To the Editor: Very amusing were the differ- ences in attitude toward the Kel- logg Peace Pact expressed in Thursday's Daily-the one by Prof. Reeves of the Political Sci- ence department and the other by a Daily editorial writer. I don't know who writes the editorials, but this one was typical of college stu- dent sophistication. It is an ex- cellent example of the reaction of a young person who has had his first introduction of the harsh truths of the world. Loyal to his new knowldge he ridicules in a very superior manner anything that might be .identified with the old ideals which he had before sophistication. I am afraid the editorial writer rather mixed his drinks when he compared the peace treaty with prohibition. In fact the tone of the whole article gave the reader the impression that the prohibition situation had "soured" the writer on anything else that optimistic persons might suggest. Such an attitude is too easilyadoptedhere near Detroit, the largest port of entry of illicit liquor. To judge the success of prohibition in any- thing like a scientific manner we must consider not only the ma- chinery employed and the present condition of the country as a whole, but also thecactual condi- tions before we had prohibition. Obviously this is rather impossible for students here, because of their limited age and location. I do not wish to discuss the war- ship-construction bill, but only to recall to mind what has been the lot of nations in the past who have called treaties mere "scraps of pa- per" and who have hoped to "guar- antee world peace by making ita DASTED ROLLS THIS -"" MEANS WAR! Factional jealousy is rife on the campus of this most perfect of uni- versities because of the lavish gifts forced upon the Law club by their benefactor, W. W. Cook. Students in the Engineering college are planning open revolt. We hate to think of what the engineers will do to those $60,000 tapestries at the Crease Dance next spring! * * * In an attempt to pacify the strained feeling between the two colleges, Rolls is present- ing several expensive tapestries to the Engineering college which will be quite in keeping with the tone of their building. There will be three tapestries in all, each dating before the American Renaissance, or January, 1, 1920.. One will be a beautiful etching of The Face on the Bar-room Floor, which we obtained at a fire sale in the lower east side in New York, one will be a wood-block print4 or a John Held, Jr., prom trot-1 ter, which we found in an alley, and the third will be a pen and ink sketch of Herbert Hoover, entitled "One Engineer Who Became Famous," which we found in Al Smith's ash can. The Advanced State Of Psychologi- cal Research As Set Forth By The Wisconsin Dean Of Women "Occasionally Miss Nardin has voiced suggestions that do not bear the weight of edicts. Red dresses arouse men, she believes, and has warned girls accordingly. - girls should not use water bubblers on the street or even on the campus. Wet lips have an exciting effect on men, she has told co-ed groups." R. F. J. * * * o 0 IMPORTANT NOTICE Parties who left a long board called a bob-sled on the Boulevard Wednesday night must remove the same at once. They are known andI action will be taken. Can identify two of the party by their shredded trousers. One of party also left blood stains. ( Remove this rubbish at once! And stay off the Boulevard! !You were violating the auto Iban. Andy Gump. I o -o * * * Well, Helen Wills finally got her man. In the match she had with that California broker she won, 6-0, 6-0, 6-0. And now when her husband comes staggering home at 3 o'clock in the morning, it will be he who will have the poker face. * * * If You're A Man, We'll- Salutations, Lark: Really, it was most considerate of you; I did so enjoy your inti- mate little personal in the column the other day. There are times, Lark, when I too will send my stuff almost anywhere, so don't despair. * * * The Yale Daily News refers to their basketball team as a "sextet." From the record the Yale basketball team has made so far this season, they need a sextet. * * S Looks Like A Long Winter Dear Lark: Is it true that the height of the average Michigan man is seven feet eight inches? Professor Ford, imagine his embarrassment, said so the other day. He even wrote it on the blackboard. Personally, I think that's a pretty tall statement, but it's the answer to your contest query of the height of something or other, and Professor Ford should win a stretch. I suggest that the prize be a giraffe or a yardstick or both. Trumpie, Demi-giant. -* * 4 j bTennessee uhasirefused to abolish its evolution law. Ap- parently the legislature won't "monkey" with it. * * * With this sloppy weather we ought to have another pretty good flu epidemic before long. We see that the women's de- bating team out-talked Indiana. We wonder how each of them managed to get in the last word. * * * Movie blurb snitched from a De- troit paper: A Thrilling Mystery Romance-A Beautiful Girl Turns Into a Coquette of Crookdom With Qrmm ~i Music And Drama o - TONIGHT: Roland Hayes will appear in Choral Union Con- I cert Series, at Hill Auditor- ium, beginning at 8:15 o'clock. * * * "MACBETH" (A Review By Paul L. Adams) George Tyler's production of: "Macbeth" with the scenic designs by Gordon Craig, which has been running in Detroit this week at the Masonic Temple, is such a splendid piece of art that one is left in doubt as to what should be praised most of the many notable things about the play-the fine work of Florence Reed, Lynn Hard- ing, Basil Gill and many more in the cast, or the scenic effects, or the closely knit theme that domi- nates the whole production and which is partially due to the innate character of the drama, and partly to the work of Mr. Tyler in his in- terpretation of it. Among the performances of the actors, Florence Reed is decidedly splendid as Lady Macbeth, domi nating her husband with a certain horrible animalism which would be almost too extreme were it not for the general tone of the tragedy. In the sleep walking scene, she holds the stage with her splendid, per- fectly controlled voice which tells the horror of Lady Macbeth with- out need for more than the simple- est of actions, among which are the washing of her hands, a thing' she does with an intensity of hor- rdr that is masterful. The solilquies o Lynn Harding as Macbeth powerfully aid the intro- spective theme of the drama, and, combined with the use of the witches as powers of evil working; upon his mind, complete the study of a man dominated by fate and his desires to do things against which his other self rebells with horror. The decorative motif of the scenes is red and black, and the gorgeous costumes of the more showy sets are designed to blend splendidly with the set colors. The use of stairs in many of the scenes and of elevations for the settings of the witch scenes is very effec- tive in getting away from monot- ony, while the changes in lighting effects are also an aid in giving the play action and tone. For instance, when Macbeth is killed, the whole stage goes dark and a single light plays on his face while from the distance is heard the mocking laughter of the witches. Then, cur- tain. PLAY PRODUCTION With an interesting progra-n of provocative one-act plays, Play Production 'have again discovered that their laboratory experiments are of sufficiently professional character to draw a public larger than the soul-panting dramad- diets. Director Windt's group work un- der apalling financial handicaps- as has been reiterated in these columns ad nauseam. Granting these, however, the caliber of work Chicago, Illinois, July 12, 1928 Lartis & Bro. Co., Richmond, Va. 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I ROLAND HAYES w Free Trial "Sells" Man This Smoke LANE HALL TAVERN The choicest of wholesome foods Breakfast IN CHORAL UNION SERIES Friday Evening, Jan. 18th A Limited Number of Tickets Are Available at $150, $2.00, and $3.00 at UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC Maynard Street 1, - - Lunch Dinner Chicken Dinner Every Sunday W. wo _.., J WIn clearance of fine shoes Entire stock reduced Dinner Music by Lopez Trio Private Rooms for Banquets $5.95 and up WAGIIR-&-COMPAHY jor flen sSince 1K4& -F ''~ done in the University theater has been of such uniform excellence that a number of what seem to be fundamental errors in this latest bill offered calls for less indulgent criticism than might be otherwise given. One of the chief failures appears to be the conception behind the interpretation of "Overtones," the Gerstenberg sketch of the alter ego in two. charming ladies. The sub- conscious self of each character was embodied in a lesser edition of the actor playing the Tone. The drama of the overtones was treat- ed naturalistically, equally with that of the tones. A wonderful chance for contrast was thereby missed, with the result that the play was not nearly so piquant nor significant as it might have been. In O'Neil's, "The Dreamy Kid" the whole play suffered under overly melodramatic direction. Any dreamy quality The Kid might have had was lost in the breathless overacting with which Golden in- vested his part. Aad particularly direction is to blame for the lack of 'building' toward a climax that would have taken the play off the level monotone of fearful melo- drama. "The Flattering Word," a non- sense farce with a cloyingly sweet moral attached to it was delightful comedy. Its utter dramatic in- significance, however, was com- pensated for by the finesse with I which it was given. George Priehs and Dee Thompson deserve honors -Priehs particularly for ad-libbing himself out of a bad hole into a clever. comedy situation. Lillian Setchell disappointed; badly made up, she failed also to take her character out of the class of sweet young things. A word remains for the settings. They were extraordinarily fine- - somewhat of a triumph for the in= genious artistic mind over the mat- ter of no money. R. U. A. *- * *~ Miss Gertrude Lang replaces Miss Marion Marchant in one of 4..1 nrinvini tn of "Mns , i Great states from wheat seeds JT was unprofitable wilderness, most men thought. But James J. Hill had faith that it could grow wheat and so he built his railroad. Settlers turned the waste-land into wheat-land, the wheat into wealth, the wealth into great west- ern states. Faith in the economic future still points the way. Right now men in the Bell System are planting the seeds of vast pos- sibilities for even better communication. Out of the belief that the public needs a broader use of the telephone is grow- ing a constantly improved long distance telephone service. Like the railroads of an earlier day, this service is now tapping and helping to dcvelop rich new terri- tories of commerce. i BELL SYSTEM