PAGE FOUR 'THE MICHICAN DAILY T ±y.- DAx. -- C R 2 10 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association.- _ 1 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use forerepublication of all news dis- patches credited to it or not otherwisecredited in this paper and the local news published ' herein. Entered at the posto. ..ce at Ann Arbor, Michigan,eas second class matter. Specialrate, of postage granted by Third Assistant Post master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editor.....................George C. Tilley City Editor...... ......... Pierce Rosenberg News Editor...George E. Simons Sports Editor ........Edward B. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor ............Marjorie Follmer Teegraph EditorC......... Geore Stauter Music and Drama ........ William J. Gorman Literary Editor. .......Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor....-Robert J. Feldman Night Editors Frank E. Cooper Robert L. Sloss William C. Gentry Gurney Williams, Jr Henry J. Merry Walter Wilds Charles R. Kaufman Reporters rankest folly if not out-and-out I blasphemy. 0 THE BIG BASS DRUM The Rev. Dr. Clarence True Wil- son, national secretary of the Board of Temperance, Prohibition, and Public Morals of the Methodist Episcopal church, has long been one of the prime reasons for the existence of H. L. Mencken's "Americana." Many times has this Deacon ,of the Drys raised hisl "down-with-all-sin" voice in the1 lobbies of the nation's capitol with the result only of augmenting the world's humor. Monday, however, he spoke be- fore the equally fanatic Women's Christian Temperance union in New York and transcended even the realm of the humorous. As-i summing the role of a modern' handwriter on the wall, he chal- lenged the American mind to meet the "moral crisis" to which the an- ti-prohibitionists are leading the country. He said he would inaugurate a total-abstinence pledge - signing campaign, observe special days of prayer and preaching for those who drink, and see that no one sleeps, forgets, or stays indifferent wherever a twentieth - century prophet is sent to represent mili- tant methodists on the firing line of the world's moral battlefield. Big words, Mr. Wilson. No doubt the W. C. T. U. clapped vigorously, and a host of bartenders through- out the country set up another for thirsty Americans-sending them that much farther straight down the road to Hell. And thus in the mouth of the big bass drum of the methodist- prohibition band do the Puritanical words of our Pilgrim forefathers return to smite us - the Pilgrim fathers who started the country off on the strict Puritanic creed-and on smuggling and rum trading. Charles A. Askren Helen Bare Louise Behymer Thomas M. Cooley W. H. Cranej Ledru E. .Davis Helen Domnine Margaret Eckels + Katherine Ferrin Carl Forsythe Sheldon C. Fullerton Ruth Geddes Ginevra Ginn J. Edmund Glavin JckGoldsmith D. B. Hempstead, Jr.I James C. Hendley ichard T. Hurley s ean 11kLevy Russel E. McCracken Lester M. May William Page Giustav R. Reich John D. Reindel Jeannie Roberts Joe Russell Joseph F. Ruwitch William P. Salzarulo George Stauter Cadwel ISwanson Jane Thayer Margaret Thompson Richard L. Tobin Beth Valentine harold O. Warren Charles S. White G. Lionel Willens Lionel G. Willens J: E. Willoughby Barbara Wright Vivian Zimit Oa stED ROLL THIS Is NORMAL WEATHER (California papers please copy) Baby freshmen, shivering with cold and wonder at this weather, needn't look for any relief. This is normal Ann Arbor weather from October to May. Ordinarily, the zero weather does not begin until the first week in November. * * * Last October it rained so much that they were thinking of making water polo a varsity sport instead of footbal. The stadium couldn't have been used for much else. Four years ago it rained three weeks stead- ily before the Minnesota game and then thedtemperature dropped to 20 degrees below zero the night before the game. They changed it to hockey. ! You read in your high school ge- ography courses that the heaviest rainfall occurred in the tropics. That's just Ann Arbor chamber of commerce propaganda. * * * - Two Iowa football players have vehemently denied before a committee representing the Western Conference that they were professionals. "No, com- missioner, all we got was hon- est wages twenty-five dol- lars a week for winding an eight-day clock." * * *' "Crime," says William G. Shep- herd, writer for Collier's and speak- er on the Oratorical association this year, "is paying too well." Yes, isn't it? Let's get Congress to clap an income tax on the profits of all criminals. In Germany they are switch- ing engines by means of radio. There is a receiving set in the cab of each locomotive. All the same, we'd hate to try it. Think how it would feel to see the fast express bearing down on you and then tune in in des- peration and receive "And now, kiddies, I wish you one and all a very pleasant god night" for directions! * * Things ARE Bad for a Ros Editor And 21 years ago today The Daily carried a front page editorial protesting that the day chosen for class elections fell on the Saturday before the national election, a day when many University students would be going home to cast their votes in the real election, instead of voting for class officers. And yet they talk about the good old days! Days weren't so good for Michi- gan when that was the crookedest 'thing an editor could find to criti- cize in class elections. Things must have been bad for the Rolls editor. He couldn't print his weekly crack about scattered votes-scattered between the polls and the place where votes are. counted. EF. E. C. DETROIT THIS WEEK: Shubert-Detroit: Messrs. Shubert present the new Romberg musical comedy "Nina Rosa." Wilson: The latest George Co- han opus about underworld codes of friendship "Sign X. Y. Z." Cass: George Sidney in "Kibit- zer. Lafayette: Thomas Mitchell's farce adaptation of Floyd Dell's{ novel about an unmarried father,j called "Little Accident." Detroit Civic: John Leicester's comedy of American home life "The Spongers.' Olympia: "The Miracle." * * I. A BETTER SHAKESPEARE The news of the arrival in De- troit next rweek of the Stratford- upon-Avon Festival Company ought to be exhilarating to those I theatre-goers in Ann Arbor who suffered at the cruel treatment given William Shakespeare recently at the Whitney. This company has been well organized for years. It doesn't rest quite so much upon the bard's reputation as those com- panies who hold that Shakespeare however smeared will always be re- cognized as England's fairest. It aims to satisfy a more discriminat- ing audience than one of school children whose dear teachers do so want them to get a glimpse of Shakespeare on the stage. In other words, it is almost unique in Amer- ica. The company had a very success- ful tour of America last year and is repeating this year. Critics ev- erywhere acclaimed the singularly lucid and interesting manner of Mr. W. Bridges Adams' direction. I Naturally, none of their produc- tions is as glamorous, as spectacu- lar, or as important as the George Tyler-Gordon Craig "Macbeth" of last year. This is just an honest repertory company, scholarly con- scientious enough to spare their audiences any such abominations as Ann Arbor had to glimpse a few weeks ago. In their short stay in Detroit the company is squeezing in eight plays, which is in itself an accom- I plishment. Their offelntg Monday night is "Much Ado About Nothing" the same production that they gave last year in England at the great birthday festival. Tuesday night they are giving "King Richard II," probably less often performed than s any of the tragedies. For the ben- efit of those interested the sched- ule is: Monday: Much Ado About Noth- ing. Tuesday: King Richard II. Wed. Matinee: Merry Wives of Windsor Thursday: Romeo and Juliet Friday: Hamlet Sat. Matinee: Julius Caesar Saturday evening: Midsummer Night's Dream * * * i 0i 0 I I Music And Drama V BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising.......s.. r.. Hollister Mab .y Advertisint........... Kasper H. Halverson Advertising.................Sherwood Upton Service ................George Spater Circulation................... Vernor Davis Accounts.. .....Jack Rose PublicationsA................George Hamilton Assistants it Raymond Campbell J ames E. Cartwright obert Crawford Harry B. Culver Thomas M Davis Norman Eliezer Donald Ewing James Hoffer Norris Johnson rlharles Kline Marvin Kobacker Laura Codling Bernice Glaser Hlortense Gooding Anna' Goldberg Lawrence Lucey tThomas Muir George Patterson Charles Sanford Lee Slayton Robert Sutton Roger" C. Thorne Josepb Van Riper Robert Williamsoin William R. Worhoys Alice McCully Sylvia Miller Ifelen E. Musselwhite Eleanor Walkinshaw D~orothea Waterman Night Editor-Walter Wilds. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1929 DUNCE CAPS AND WHIPS Dr. Frederick Rand Rogers, New York educator, recently told 5,000 of his Utah colleagues that grades, as applied to the American educa- tional system, are little more than a substitute for the dunce cap and the whip. Said he, "Colleges wor- ship marks, and an A.B. degree merely indicates that the student has agreed with his professors dur- ing his four years at school." Dr. Rogers was right, but hardly strong enough. To a certain ex- tent the higher marks do go to the man who best imitates his teacher, but they have in addition the in- finitely more vicious quality of be- coming in themselves the end of, education. As our educational sys- tem is constituted at present, the student works not to learn but to get a passing mark, and there is a world of difference between the two. Worse still, a large and varried enough collection of passing marks equals one bachelor of arts degree, and the recipient thereof walks out of his alma mater an "educated" man in the eyes of the world.. In not a few instances he has difficul- ty ; spelling English, has never heard of Lavoisier or Beaumont and Fletcher, and vaguely connects Darwin with apes. These, of course are not set criteria whereby to judge the educated man, but they are indicative of a serious fault in our educational system- a fault which may briefly be summed up: shallowness and splotchiness. Time and again it has been prov- ed that in one strenuous, all-night review the essential facts of a course can be well enough commit- ted to memory for transcription into a bluebook the following day. The customary passing grade is re- ceived, and everything thus sud- denly forgotten in the student's haste to learn the essential facts of the next course. One salient fact is usually remembered: the shining ----- DESERVING OF FCREDIT No event of major importance to the University at large, no social- event, athletic contest, or pep meet- ing passes without the presence of the Varsity band to enliven the af- fair. Beginning the year as an, organization of but fifty-five pieces, the band has now increased its membership to the imposing size of ninety playing and four non- playing men. The credit for forming these men into one of the best aggregations of, its kind in the country goes to Captain H. B. Turner, of the de- partment of military science and tactics. He has drilled the band, taught the men military precision and novel formations, and has in- stilled a degree of esprit de corps which has never before been ap- parent. The comparison of this year's organization with that of last year shows there has been a tremend- ous improvement in every phase of its work. The music is better, the drilling shows increased snap, and letter formation have never been attempted until this season. Ohio State, with a band of more than one hundred pieces which drills every day, was not superior to thei Michigan organization last Satur- day. Both to "Uncle Bob" Campbell Captain Turner, and the ninety- odd men who compose the Michi- gan band, great credit should go. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words it possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The namies of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expresing the editorial opinion of the Daily. SA LE EXTRARDINRY! Only Seven More Shopping Days In Our Ann v ,,,.aly Monte S) a GOOD WORK To the editor: The student body is to be con- gratulated on its support in the' game Saturday. Over the long run Michigan has won so many games and lost so few, that critics delight in pointing out what poor sports we are when we do lose. Such talk as this literally was blown to pieces by the volley after volley of Michi- gan cheers sent out at the Ohio stand in the stadium. Keep it up. Those cheers are going to win for us. Several years ago the Student council and Harry Tillotson setl aside a block of the best seats for I the loudest barkers in school. Suc- cessive councils and cheer leaders have organized these barkers, ad- ded a touch of color, and made of the whole thing a living symbol of, M'jich igan sniv-f Soh jisnmir np- * * *I In Canada, women have won the right to sit as spectators in the senate. Now watch the good looking senators get elec- ted. * * * It is understood that the entire student council was on hand for the junior elections yesterday. What chance is there for an honest election? Or has the precedent set by Messrs. Kern, Gilmartin, and Sanderson been set aside? The Museum officials seem to be pretty much up in the air in regard to the matter of a proper diet for their badger. If that badger is finicky about his (or hers-we really don't know) food, they ought to take it to almost any Ann Arbor eating place for discipline. In Scotland they are planning an air liner that will travel 120 miles an hour. Think of what would hap-' pen if one of the passengers drop- ped a dime out of the window at a height of 10,000 feet. We understand that insanity will be the plea of the person who is to be arraigned before the council for handing in a false name at the Junior polls. This will be an easy case to prove. Any one taking that much interest in the elections must' either have lost his mind at the time or else have shown previous signs of imbecility. LARK KIBITZER George Sidney is going to con- tinue merrily for another week at the Cass Theatre with his play "Ki- bitzer." Sidney has the financially advantageous position in the the- atrical scale of values of an impor- tant second-rate actor. Since the retirement. of David Warfield and the untimely death of Barney Ber- nard, Mr. Sidney is accepted as the foremost actor to fill some of the! minor character parts they made famous. He has done many things on his own hook, too, of course. "Welcome Stranger," the play which ran five solid years, was one of them, and then his screen ap- pearances in, the "Potash and Perlmutter" series and the "Cohensi and Kellys" made him as familiar a figure as Jiggs of the cartoons. The activities of Actor's Equity has1 kept him off both the screen and the stage for the past few years, and "Kibitzer" marks his first ap- pearance. The play by Jo Swerling and Ed- ward Robinson presents him in a typical and attractive role. Sidney, is a kibitzer, the modern name for a buttinsky in a card - game - the fifth player in a four-handed game, the card-room equivalent of a back-seat driver. The term ap- plys a little more broadly to any- one who insists on giving unsought advice or criticism. As the proprie- tor of a small cigar store, Mr. Sid- ney appears as the perfect kibitzer,' the super-kibitzer, who has the latest dope on pinochle, prize-fight- ing, politics, and the stockmarket, ur Coats$1 Your Choice of Muskrat-Sealines-Black Caracul Pony-Baby Seal-Panther Carefully chosen pelts have been selected for fashioning he ;e smart Fur Coats which we are offering at this. attractive price. A small deposit will hold your Coal until delvery #'r Truly Fine Cloth Coats LAVISHLY TRIMMED WITH FUR Gorgeous creations developed in beautiful fabrics with rich fur- ings. Some are extreme, others are conservative . . . the nodern trend is found not only, in the fashionings but at the price which is as unusual as the garments. $68 antd $98 /1 1j (1i 1( Typical Jacobson's Dresses Charming styles with that perfection of workmanship and beauty of materials that assure lasting smartness at Anniversary prices which make them so attractive. 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