?AOE FOUR 1 iblishd every morning escept 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 t~o 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, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- hoard Street.4. Phones: Editor:al. 4925; Business, 21214. ,THE MI OI N DAILY EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor... .............Nelson J. Smith City Editor.............. Stewart Hooker News Editor............Richard C. Kurvink Sports Editor...............W. Morris Quinn Women's Editor.............Sylvia S. Stone Telegraph Editor..............George Stanter Music and Drama ...............R. L. Askcren Assistant CityEditor..........Robert Silbar Night Editors Joseph E. Nowell Charles S. Monroe Ronald J. Kline Pierce Rosenberg Lawrence R. Klein George [. Simons George C. Tilley Reporters Paul L. Adams D~onald E. Layman Morris Alexander Charles A. Lewis C. A. Askren Marian McDonald 'Bertram Askwith I lenry Merry Louise Behynmer Elizabeth Quaife Arthur Bernstein Victor Rabinowitz Seton C. Bovee Joseph A. Russell Isabel Charles Anne Schell L. R. Chubb Rachel Shearer Frank m. Cooper Howard Sim-non Helen Domine Robert L,. 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 G=urney Williams David B.' Henpstead Jr. Walter Wilds Richard Jung George F. Wohlgemuth Charles R. Kaufman Edward L. Warner Jr. Ruth Kelsey Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF - Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER AvriigDepartment Managers1 Advertising...............Alex K. Scherer Advertising........... .A. James Jordan Advertising...................Carl W. Hammer Service.................Herbert E. Varnum Circulation..............eorge S. Bradley Accounts..............Lawrence E. Walkley Publications................. Ray M. Hofelich pecillyif one, believed in ghosts, as people must who introduce such reform laws.Ilas it come to aJ point where the whole populace of the nation is in such danger of "hell's fire" that in order to avoid overcrowding we must make lawsl to keep people from pleasures which up to this time have been considered righteous, but under latest interpretation have become listed under major crimes? Cer- tainly there can be nothing in the Bible which condems innocent amusement of this kind. If the objection is because of a temptation to immorality, may we ask what under the sun is not a temptation? If it is because some- body has to work, is it not com- parable to the work necessitated by the musical program in churches? And furthermore, what could be more noble than the desire of a person to entertain in an unob- jectionable way, his fellow men? Can it be one of these, or is it the desire of the senator to make small communities the center of religious fanaticism and hypocrisy? Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words ii possible. Anonymous com- iunications willb be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regardled as confidential, upon re- quast. Letters published should nut be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. . 'TH"A-AA Ti. . -ITA1 %A {- L' . 1 4T7. i J L rmM1.iY~~~ .Yi...Y..... .................... ....... .Y. ...... .. .............. Y..f....... Mary Chase J eanette Dale Vernor Davis Bessie Egeland Saily Faster Anna FGodberg Kasper Halverson George Hamilton ack porwich Djix Humphrey Assistants Marion Kerr Lillian Kovinsky Bernard Larson H olister iabley I. A. Newman Jack Rose Carl F. Schemnm George Seater Sherwood Upton Marie Wellstead 1 SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1929 Night Editor-GEORGE E. SIMONS WHAT'S NEXT FOR REFORM? Nebraska's Senate is now con- sidering a bill introduced Wednes- day which would prohibit the presentation of plays, vaudeville, and even musical concerts on Sun- day in Nebraska except in cities ofI more than 5,000 which have chart- ers with contrary provisions. There is no information available' as yet as to whether or not the bill has a chance of passing, but the mere fact that it has been in- troduced 'into a state legislature shows clearly that the reform fever has gripped our law-makers. It is hard to believe that such members of the legislatures are truly repre-? senting the opinions of the major- ity of people for whom they are acting. It would seem that they were extremely weak charactersI who can not resist the "button- holing" campaigns sponsored by certain religious sects in this country. It is despicable attempt by religious fanatics to force their dogmas on an unwilling, but docile public. This measure is carrying the spirit of reform even beyond the point at which Tennessee and Arkansas stop, with their laws against the teaching of the theory of evolution in public schools. It is even more narrow to have their beliefs brought under the light of knowledge for examination. Does this Nebraska senator wish to add to the prohibition farce by cutting off what little amusement is at present within the law?; There are any number of small towns throughout the country which would approach a state of comprehensive rigor mortis were the townspeople to be left without plays, vaudeville or music of any kind. There would be far more, entertainment in a cemetery, es-I IN DEFENSE OF "THE GIRL FRIEND" To the Editor: "AMERICANA" The amusing lines published un- der this heading in The Daily for Friday are indeed surprising and startling. With the 'best reten- tions the American Housewives have taken a tolerable attitude yet weakened their stand by some silly prejudices and thoughtless lan- guage. In expressing the opinion of a small group of men I am sure we will not revert to the hoop-skirt bathing suit of the past. It is in- deed regrettable that the lad;ies are now to go in bathing with all the superfluous woolens that they can carry. They seem to forget that bathing is a sport and an exercise in which one tries to swim as fast and as easily as possible, and this surely cannot be done with twenty-five pounds of water soaked cloth. There is nothing in- decent or vulgar in the modern one piece bathing suit. The modern girls who wear them have certain- ly no "vulgar exhibitionist com- plex" in my opinion. They are as sensible and as refined as it is nec- essary for them to be. Men have always liked women with the best womanly qualities. The brass-faced bold girl is never 'highly regarded by men, but is merely a play-thing, a once-over date to brawl with, commanding and receiving no respect, and usually seen in places where the men will not take their esteemed girl friends. Invariably the bold, hard girl is the laughing stock of every "bull-session." Skirts decently short need not go to the ankles. There is nothing in- I decent in knee skirts to the right thinking average man. They are convenient and sensible. If the housewives leaders think "It is now chic to be modest" I might remind them that it has al- ways been chic to be modest for Christian women of England and America during several centuries. The entire tone of the "House- wives" appeal is silly and carping. I would suggest that they use a more refined appeal in better language if they are to receive the attention of our better modern girls. I trust that our future house-1 wives will turn out to be as good as the American housewife of the past, despite the fact that present sociological trends indicate a slightJ confusion in the home life of ad-! vanced countries. Let us hope that! no further slanders of this sort will be addressed to our campust girl-friends.Y A' Male Grad. LABORATORY PRODUCTION OF ORIGINAL ONE-AC T PLA YS A REVIEW, BY DR. CLARENCE D. THORPE CAMPUS HISTORY interpret the play as the author Only a professional sceptic-one had intended, was one of the no- of the sourly pessimistic sort-- table things about the whole affair. could fail to admit that what went The first play on the bill, was on in old University Hall last eve- Helen Adler's "Side-Show," a de- ning, when the Department of lightful little whimsy, a curtain- Speech gave a laboratory produc- raiser eight or nine minutes long, tion of six student-written one-act picturing Punch and Judy in pri- plays, is to make history on this vate life. It is a play of delicacy campus. It is not, of course, that and insight, a fantasy too much this is the first time a student-writ- like life to seem remote or too ten play has been produced at amusing. Miss Adler can write, and' Michigan. There was the old she has dramatic sense, both of! "Players' Club," for instance, whose which capabilities one would like home products were staged in the to see exercised in a longer piece. diminutive barn-theater over on {1Vigorously realistic is Jerome Mc- North Side; there was a time too, Carthy's "My Man," a grim traggly I believe, when students really of the present time, with enough wrote the book for the Union melodramatic dressing bo insure Opera, and when-though this is good theater. The play centers more problematical-a junior girl about the matrimonial aspirations really composed the Junior Girls' of Liz, a waitress in a "cheap Play. But the laboratory produc- joint" of a shabby American vil- tion of student plays last night was ' lage, whose wistful dreams of a' something different. Here, for the new life, "away from all this," go first time in the life of this Uni- tumbling. Mr. McCarthy's play is versity, so far as I am aware, was convincing and it has dramatic a combination of student dramatic power and intensity of a high or- writing with student production, der, the kind which grows out of under something like the condi- a clear realization of character and tions which must prevail if we are situation. to be assured of a successful future "Believe It or Not," Mr. Heyman of creative dramatic wok, challenges his audience, in a short! production, growing as it sophisticated comedy in two scenes, did out of the play-writing contest which seems to be serious until -Which has recently enjoyed given an adroit pull-up at the end. varied publicity in these and other Mr. Heyman is neatly competent columns of The Daily-has behind as a craftsman; his dialogue, it those forces in the University marked by quietly cynical over- most interested in the creation of tones, is good, and his plan for an artistic original drama. on our staging original and effective. campus, that is, the students who The most sophisticated play of are directly engaged in play-writ- the bill is Mr. Askren's "Passion's ing and the three departments of progress," a bit of a modern farcical the Division of English, which, un- comedy of manners, in which the der the new plan, are working in author sets out to present in clever, cooperation with each other on ironic dialogue his ideas on the such matters. Moreover, the student psychology of sex. Here the stage impulses behind both the writing seems to be set for what has be- and producing of these plays are come a conventionally naive tri- entirely in the direction of excel- angular situation with emphasis on lence in drama, unfettered by con- mutual sexual athleticism, but the siderations of box-office receipts merit of the play arises out of the and the direct or indirect influence fact that nothing comes of it. There of Broadway taste. is a Molnaresque flavor to Mr. A Askren's irony, and now and again CAMPAIGN l some of the touch and go of the Moliere, we are told, used to havesMeftedoueh gc he laboratory productions of his playsMilne type of dialogue which makes in hisorynpode.ismethod as one pleasantly expectant about the inthings he has yet to write to read his comedies to an old Dorothy Ackerman's "Outside woman who was his housekeeper, This Room" is a serious drama of as she sat with her work at the domestic life in Switzerland. Miss fireside. Her judgment, Moliere Ackerman has, in Madame Black- found, was infallible: what she liked theauincelied;w he man, presented a case of conflict liked the audiences liked; where- in which a naturally kindl an ever she laughed they laughed. Oneiwhichwan linl and suspects that this old woman was'wesoe woanwihandaged a shewd neand newa god Idependent husband on her hands is~ a shrewd one, and knew a good Ifaced with the necessity of having thing when she saw it. That made to live. The strength of the play Moliere's problem simple enough. lies in the quiet subtlety with which The simultaneous staging of six the author brings to the surface plays by the Speech department the inner spiritual turmoil which last night was not so simple. To exists in an outwardly calm and find casts and competent direc- uninteresting situation-the hard tors for so many plays is in itself craft of Madame Blackman, the no easy task. But a more serious suspicious resentment of the difficulty was our utter lack of a icgirls, who, with but - a preverted notion suitable place and the proper Iof the truth, have come to regard equipment to give those engaged Madame Blackman as a monster to in producing the plays a chance. aaeBaka samntrt .s a chancebe feared and hated, and have per- In a school where money is lavish-. mitted their hatred and suspicion ly expended on every hand, many to color even more darkly their al- times for less worth while things ready introverted, circumscribed I than cultivation of the drama, old;lives. University Hall is a crime. An affair T such as this laboratory experimentnshedmthemteriallfonrtur demonstrates anew the need for ath IHinckley's genially satiric farce, university theater with at adequate endowent o prvidemean for"The Joiners," in which the habit-I endowment to provide means for ual "=joiner"--of lodges chiefly--isC doing the things we are now ob- uade "oipneteflodge chniefis made completely, but convincingly, C viously ready to do. It is a tribute ridiculous. There would have beenI to Mr. Windt and his capable assis-ftnC four to start with in the new lodge tants that they keep going under ~ ' if the "Bears" and the "Priests" present conditions, cheerfully un- couldeonlyeave agred;rbute [ could only have agreed; but they complaining, and through sheer didn't, so there were born in on force of enthusiasm are getting dint'oteewr on inon breath as it were, two new brother- I fine results. But the present state hoods instead of one, two charter i C of things in- physical equipment is members in each. Mr Hinckle no credit to Michigan. It is high meers in wathe set outctoedoC . . succeeded in what he set out to do, time, just now when conditions are'C . ~and aue i uinet h ripe for a fine cooperative creative n amused his audience to the effort drama, for some one to int of hilarity. effort in dgrmaiforcsomeignetoThere are many things one would stage an aggressive campaign like to say about each director. , I . 11t'~ itC f'19] iAthl'r ®t vr~ New York Listed Stocks Private wires to all Markets Conservative margin accounts solicited Telephone 22541 Brown-Cress & Co., Inc. Investment Securities 7th Floor First Nat'l Bank Bldg. P3B. HARDING Dealer in ANTIQUES Upholstering, Furniture Repairing, Refinishing and Remodeling 218 East Huron Street Ann Arbor - - - - - Michigan Phone 3432 Tickets on sale at PRINT & BOOK SHOP 521 E. Jefferson Tel. 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CLOSES MONDAY There is no surer way to realize your dreams than to have a Christmas Club account with us. The weekly payments soon grow into A fine large sum-avail- able just when you need it most. A Club for Every Purse and Purpose ANN ARBOR SAVINGS BANK. Main at Huron 707 North U. Q --v l I Pardon Us, Mr. Derby, If WE Laugh REVELATION VS. PERSPIRATION 1 : d universayTna y Lern ad enough money to keep it going. IN REVIEW But to return to the nro Aram last each play, each set of characters, as individual pieces of work im- pressed those of us in the audience, but a few random remarks must