I x ?AG! FrOUR 1T1-1FEM T C 11T C W DfW T r TUESDfAY.A (CTBE'9. 1020 " . _ .... 1 a 1 L &Va a 6 a-a a 6.a L"1 AN a~ A a L 1 .n aw u .a.vi-a. 1 W V .6. V.WdiJLV Ago$ i i7Na7 gIw t dtit&rn .Uattg!; Published every morning except Moncfay during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use forerepublication of all news dis- patches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein.. Entered at the posto. .ce 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- nard Street. Phoned Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF, of 'forty-niners'; the William Rock- hill Nelson museums now being erected in Kansas City, once chiefly renowned as a railroad and stock- yards center; the long-delayed ap- preciation of James Gibbons Hun- eker as a valuable and sound critic; the establishment of a department of fine arts at the University of Iowa, and newly instituted lecture series on the arts at Yale and Michigan-all these give credence to the presence of a virile, intelli- gent and well-conceived verve in our contemporary life toward an equitable appreciation of cultural values, per se. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words it possible. Anonymous comn- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. Editor, Michigan Daily, Sir: Musicand Dama I Telephone 4925 " 7 r1.;. 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Worboys Laura Codling Bernice Glaser Hartense Gooding Anna Goldberg Alice McCully Sylvia Miller Helen E. Musselwbite Eleanor Walkinshaw Dorothea Waterman Night Editor- Charles R. Kaufman TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1929 "L'ART POUR L'ART" Three-quarters of a century ago in these commonwealths, one who dared to take up the bludgeon in a crusade for the fine arts, more particularly the plastic arts, was a voice howling in a veritable wil- derness. An interest in water-col- ors or the distinctions of a Velas- quez was hardly compatible with the engrossing business of conquer- ing the wilderness, amassing one's fortunes, and settling the vagaries of the bimetallic standard, or of the "400." As the already well-defined lines of social cleavage spread from the East over the balance of the coun- try, attendant upon the growth of large personal fortunes and class consciousness, men of leisure turn- ed to more ethereal concerns and devoted themselves to the practice of the arts, or to the formulation of academic and critical criteria in judging the work of the practition- eers. Yet, the hoi polloi remained outside the sanctum, scoffing at these as they did at the figure of the velvet-clad Wilde while he saundered down Broadway gazing with erotic intent upon a sunflow- er. Meanwhile, certain men of means and unobtrusive good taste were gathering to themselves col- lections of art objects, which ulti- mately have been donated to the public at large and admirably hous- ed in appropriate structures. These efforts of isolated 'patrons of the arts were the forerunners of manifold circumstances and activi- ties which now are at once pro- ducing and enhancing an appreci- ation of plastic arts in the minds of the masses. Furthermore, in the wake of these, the colossal vulgar- ity of the World War, epitomizing much of the inanity in our head- long crassness, in spite of the ideal- istic propaganda, created a sort of purification process, which allowed men to go the gamut of material-+ ism and contemplate its conclusion, then finally to secure relief from their disgust in less mundane af- fn ira_ T is ni r 01 ?1 r'nr.4in ..that May I submit to the readers of The Daily a statement of fact con- cerning the policies of the Depart- ment of Speech in regard to those aspects of its activities which are grouped under the name of play Production? 1. Play Production is a convenient label that is used to cover, (A) a group of academic courses in this department which have to do with various aspects of the production of plays and, (B) the laboratory and workshop activities which are essential adjuncts to these courses. 2. All plays produced by Play Production, regardless of the audi- torium in which they are produced, are laboratory plays. They~ are all used for teaching purposes, and all, without exception, bear essentially the same relation to the regular courses that activities in the phy- sical laboraory bear to the various courses in physics. This is just as true of the plays produced in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre to which admission charged, as it is of plays produced in the Univerity Hall auditorium for which no ad- mission is charged. It is just as true of plays produced in the Sum- mer Session as it is of plays pro- duced in the regular year. In an ideal situation there would be no charge whatever made for any 'plays produced by Play Production. The Money taken in by Play Pro- duction, when admission is charged to its performances, is spent on permanent equipment, or to pay for other productions to which no ad- mission, or insufficient admission, is charged. 3. Mr. Windt announced no new policy last week in regard to the participation of students in Play Production in dramatic activities of student organizations. He simply called the attention of his students to what has been for some time the policy of the department, a policy which is substantially* identical %yith the policies followed in prac- tically all of the American univer- sities where curricular attention is paid to dramatic affairs. The em- phasis should probably not be put upon the word "permission," but upon the fact that Mr. Windt "wants such arrangements made at the earliest possible opportunity to avoid conflicts and misunderstand- ings." The policy of the Depart- ment in regard to student dramatic organizations, as in regard to all other student organizations with which it has any common interest (and they are numerous) is to be in every way as helpful as possible, all with due regard to our prior ob- ligation to the university curricu- lum, and its proper standards. It is clearly impossible for cours- es in dramatics to be properly con- ducted on a textbook, lecture, and quiz basis. Laboratory work in scenery, lighting, costuming, acting, and directing are everywhere, so far as I know, considered essential to proper instruction. The labor- atory work in connection with these courses needs team-work, the cooperation of some times large groups. It is impossible for the di- rector of such activities to carry them on successfully unless the work that he has to assign from time to time to individual mem- bers of the group can be at once undertaken by them. All that Mr. Windt is asking of the students is that they consult him early in re- gard to projected participation in outside activities in dramatics, and that in each case the requirements of the courses and the laboratory be considered first. This does not mean, and has not meant in the past, that students have been told they could not take part in the pro-' ductions of student organizations. It has simply meant that plans are laid in advance and the work of the courses and the laboratory is ARMA VIRUMQUE CANO It is unfortunate that the already a "wobbly" situation of campus dra-A matics has been dealt such a vig-1 orous, even if momentary, blow byp what appears to be misinterpreta- tion of recent announcements. It is clear that many will see fit to interpret Mr. Windt's recent publict announcement of a policy thatI really has been Play Production's I for over a year as a "bombshell"a aimed at the enemy with the ideaI of establishing himself as dictator.- There is nothing new about this I misinterpretation. Many have been pleased to picture the campus in I the throes of a dramatic struggle. Talk of war and bitter antagonismt and survival of the fittest has been going on for some time now. It is interestingly romantic, as all gossipI is, but really conducive to the ulti- mate resolution of difficulties in a1 University Theatre-a project in which it is assumed all alike are interested. It is more sane to see in Mr. Windt's announcement the logical outcome of his organization's rapid development through the past year and a half. It was inevitable that the various organizations should come to some definition of the field of their activities. If this defini- tion precipitates a struggle (which it shouldn't), then the question is as to the intrinsic importance of the organizations. Announcements and decisions of Play Production I would choose to consider far more important than those of any other organization on the campus. Un- ion-subsidized Mimes and Comedy Club, strictly speaking, contribute nothing to the growth toward the realization of a University theatre. All their productions can do is to prove the existence of real acting talent on the campus. Whereas, it is the job of Play Production, a university organization, to prove by the efficiency of its operation, as well as by the success of its pro- ductions, the need of a University theatre. If Mimes and Comedy Club choose to read into Play Produc- tion's effort to solve the many as- pects of this problem a desire to be their commercial competitor, then they deserve no sympathy. For such isn't the case. The real trouble lies in the fact that Play Production just at pres- ent does look like a commercial or- ganization. But as has been re- peated ad nauseam, it is absurd to blame Mr. Windt for the fact that the campus situation is not yet ideal. Just at present Play Pro- duction is forced to take on a semi- commercial character to support and build itself to its ideal condi- tion-that of a strictly experimen- tal laboratory inviting people to watch its work. It is obliged to use the Mendelssohn theatre that its students may have the use of the remarkable equipment there, but more important, because it has almost reached the limit of its pos- sible expansion in University Hall. To accuse Mr. Windt of cherishing "big producer" ambitions just be- cause of this at present necessary twist in his organization's policy is to confuse the issue. And, of course, it was wrong to think Mr. Windt's announcement about students confining their ac- tivity to his organization as a nov- elty. Indeed, Mr. Shuter announc- ed last January in The Daily that "those who actively engaged in any other campus organization are bar- red from trying out for Mimes." This announcement, coming from the director of a strictly extra-cur- ricular activity is, to say the least, strange; not dissimilar to a possible condition of the editor of Gargoyle refusing to use candidates who were taking Rhetoric courses. The point about Play Production is that it is not a student activity; it is, a course for which credit is given. It is true that public performance in a theatre, the playground of the ego, is far more satisfying a stu- dent obligation than several bored afternoons in a science laboratory. But the two laboratories are, iden- tical in reason for existence. To successfully carry on his experi- ments Mr. Windt must demand that1 his organization be intact - its membership and their availability so sure that he can carry on his pro- cess of expansion adequately. To repeat, Play Production's problem is the creation of an aud- ience so numerous, so articualte and so enthusiastic as to convince University officials that a theatre is necessary to the cultural life of TONIGHT: At the Wilson The- atre in Detroit, the Stratford-upon- Avon Company presents "King Richard II" by William Shakes- peare. 0- DETROIT SYMPHONY Ossip Gabrilowitsch, fresh from a triumphant Europeon tour, brings his Detroit Symphony orchestra uW Hill auditorium tomorrow nignt in an interesting program. Mr. Gab- rilowitsch has become increasingly important in American music in the nine years in which he has directed the destinies of the Detroit orch- estha from an almost unknown in- stitution to its present place among the leading orchestras of the world. Late in February Mr. Gabrilo- witch sailed for Europe where his manifold engagements were as fol- lows: two concerts as soloist with the Amsterdam Concertgebouw un- der Mengelberg at Amsterdam, the Hague and Rotterdam; two with the Vienna Symphony as soloist and conductor; in April three concerts with the Berlin Philharmonic; a recital tour in Greece; in May, the Paris Symphony Orchestra as con- ductor with Cortot as soloist; and in June, as soloist, as soloist under Furtwangler in the Brahms Festi- val at Yena. His year of diversified efforts won for him great recogni- tion throughout the land. It is not improbable that this year he re- turns to his own organization with renewed energy. Certainly his tour must have sharpened his musician- ship. His opening concerts in Det- roit have been interesting and his two appearances in Ann Arbor this year will be enthusiastically re- ceived. He is offering the following program to morrow night: Overture to Rosamunde Schubert Symphony in D Minor Franck Lento; Allegre non troppo Allegretto Allegro non troppo Serenade for Wind Instruments in E flat major, Op., 7-R. Strauss; Symphonic Dance in Basque Style from the opera, "The Venus of the Basque"-Wctzler First Rumanian Rhapsody, in A major, Op. 11-Enesco DRACULA The Mendelssohn theatre is mak- ing a brave attempt to bring so- phisticated pictures to Ann Arbor audiences. The program of this week features the Murnau produc- tion, "Count Nosferatu," a pictur- ization of the Brain Stoker vampire novel "Dracula." This picture shows some traces of the able direction of Murnau who was responsible for the fine production of "The Last Laugh," which introduced Emil Jannings to his American audience. Murnau has been more recently im- ported to direct Hollywood's one pretentious attempt at symbolical drama "Sunrise." "Dracula" is poor in technical ef- fects. Interior lighting and fade- outs are managed scarcely as well as they were in American pictures of pre-war vintage. However, Mur- nau knows camera angles better than most American directors-the street scenes in particular show his ability in this line. He has a gen- ius for the pictorial. Most of the exterior shots are very fine. Espec- ially noteworthy are the scenes filmed along the seashore. Mur- nau makes the most of light and shadow; he manages to suggest a wide range of color in the mono- chrome. The actor who played the vam- pire Count Nosferatu is possessed of a physique and sufficient his- tronic' ability to give the title role a certain fiendish realism. His di- abolical make-up rivals Lon Chan- ey's creations in plastic art. He reached the "heights of horror" in the scene immediately preceding dissolution. .The romantic young hero, Wald- emar, is overacted according to the usual German method. An out- standing piece of character acting is done by the man who plays Nos- feratu's accomplice. The sly cun- ning and sheer evil of this individ- ual are most clearly portrayed in the prison scenes. The less said about the feminine members of the cast the better. The original film was apparently of much greater length, the cutting of the present one having been neither judicious nor adequate. The picture drags heavily at the begin- ning and the ending which is al- most laughably sudden seems to-I tally irrelevant. d l , ! 1 'l. / '. / Y. 1l rrr .rr x ; I Miller's POTAT-C-CHIPS Fresh Daily FRESH DONUTS Watch Them Made in the Window Cookies-Fresh-Daily 224 South State Light Lunches Soups Home-made Pies and Cakes 'I $3 I Nos i and Pocket Kodaks Series I I NIQUE is the word to describe these Kodaks--as you open one of. them, the les automatically springs into picture-making position. You can have your choice of fixed focus models with meniscus lens, or adjustable focus models with Kodarf.7.9 or Kodak Anastigrnat f.7.7 lens. And we know that you'll be pleased with any choice you make. Prices Read The Daily Classifieds I 1 _ I i $25.00 for any lost Key I can't Replace. t Let. i Sho Higi A. 11S09 Half I Us Do Your e Repairing hest Quality of Work T. COOCH &SON 9 South University Block From Campus This is the Band you want to make your party a big success. SIX SNAPPY ENTERTAINERS Ben's Blue Blowers "We Satisfy" 4310 Phones 6749 Joe Benjamin, Manager 25.00 REWRD For any article worth repairing that I can't repair and make as strong or stronger than new. Free repair for any item that I can't name its occupation. I want the repair work that others turn down. One trial will win your everlasting confidence. Keys manufactured from the first one to the last. Reduced rates in quantities. Get my prices for Faculties, Fraternities and Sororities. Keys for your auto, your aoartment, homes, stores, offices, trunks, mail boxes, suitcases, hand bags, vanity cases, desks drawers, lockers, pad- locks, etc. A REAL MASTER MECHANIC 440 South State Phone 9200 No.j, 2y3K- No. mA, 2MX1%; '$5 to $24 7 to $26 FRANCISCO BOYCE 719 North University Avenue ' i A REAL'S SERVICE CAR "FIXALL" s the the same low rate as work brought to my Repair Shop.. Open 7 A. M. to 9 P. M. d t ~~ - m DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA WEDNESDAY, OCT.30 8:15 P. M. Choral Union.3re I / OSSIP DABRI LOWI*CH, Conductor .1 K R A limited number of season tickets i still available at $6.00, $8.00, $10.00 or Or $12.00. Tickets for single concerts $1.509 $2.00 and $2.50 at its