PA6!! . s .,n,. x ...: .. ..... :iI'. _ _ ,43/4 ,Lai. >KA . ._u ..,r .SYi. _SII, ..,. ... . J. ~<._ ". *w~r-...,..n Vfl~mfl.a. . n..-.4..M ~~i.* k~" ~Z 1''A N' ',- D A I .' ', ' ~.,t* *,a,. _ .... .. . rA .:. t s. n... ..... v .i..:: ..ter Inuin i *;e ity discipline. If Published every :n z%-g exte B o et ij'th, L i r ^tro f $ 1"": t_ t:^.c. -9. adlttl :es~.;:1 f:hi mr t41rnbfc^:of C~oiit=2 t1 ,ing' Gt ^ mta I aie: AcA.o n des more than moral deficiencies The Associated Press is exrsively entitled be made the basis fGr expulsion. to the use for republication of all news ise We urge that academic standards patches, credited to it or not otherwise creditedW reta caei tnad tn this paper and the local news published be so raised ghat the undesirable hqrein. element of the student population Michigan, as second class matter. Special rrate automatically cannot pursue its of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- vices and maintain a high enough masbecrpioG n by carrier, $4.00; b ail, $4.s0. scholastic average to warrant con- Offices- Ann Arbor Press Building, May- tinued attendance here. narl .A t p ! About Books fn 01 r= I .Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR f ELTIS B. MERRY Editor.....................George C. Tilley City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg News Editore..............eorge E. Simons Sports Editor ........Edward B. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor-............Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editor .............George Stauter M1usrc 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 Charles A. Askren William Page Helen Bare rGustav R. Reich y Louise Behymer John D. Reindel } Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts r W. H. Crane Joe Russell Ledru E. Davis Joseph F. Ruwitch I Helenamine William P. Salzarulo 1 Margaret Eckels (Gecrge Stauter Katherine Ferrin Cadwell Swanson Carl Forsythe Jane Thayer Sheldon C. Fullerton Margaret Thompson r RuthGeddes Richard L. Tobin 4 Ginevra Ginn BJeth Valentine Edmund Glavin Harold O. Warren jack Goldsmith Charles S. White D. B. Hempstead, Jr. G. Lionel Willens mesrC. Hendley Lionel G. Wile n sichard T1 JHurley %' J. E. Willoughby Jean H. Levy Barbara Wright ussell E. McCracken Vivian Ziit Lester M. May_ BUSINESS STAFF{ Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager' ALEX K. SCHERERI Department Managers Advertising. .........[.. HTollister Mahley Advertising ............Kasper E. Halverson Advertising .............Sherwood A. Upton Service .. ............. George A. Siater Circulation.................. J. ernor Davis Accounts..............,loh lt. Rose Publication,..........eorge ltaniilvn Assistants Raymond Campbell Lawrence L ucey James E. Cartwright Thotbas NIieir Robert Crawford Gleor ge Pa~tteirson. H-arry B. Culver Charles S'aniftrd Thomas M. Davis l.ee lay ton Norman Eliezer Robert Sutton Donald Ewing Roger C rho-,e f ains Hoffer Joseph Va.i Ripter oris Johnson" Rober t 'A liatrisut, Charles Kline William R. Worboys Marvin Kobacker Laura Codling Alice McCully Bernice Glaser Sylvia Mliller_ Hartense Gooding . iAenI E. ,.Oselwhite Anna Goldberg .: f'eaior WalkiishaW Dorothea Watermau Night Editor-FRANK E. COOPER THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1929 Under this sort of system the dismal duties of the dean's office' would not be wholly superseded:r unfortunately it is possible for someI to be simultaneously brilliant and vicious, and cases must arise in which sheer brilliance could not1 excuse extraordinary vice. But the great mass of the student body, is not innately unbalanced; it is our conviction that their week end deviations from thie straight and narrow are more than half occa- sioned by not having anything' more serious to do. Especially does this thesis seem tenable in the light of the present "mass-education" cry against low standards and the Eastern sneer at the "state diplo- ma mills" of the Middle West. To close this plea we ask: is not a high academic standard a better advertisement for the University than a long list of disciplinary ac- tions? - o- THE EDITORS Today several hundred members of the- University Press club of The Founding Of The American ' Republic Volume I The War of Independ- ence American Phase, by Claude H. Van Tyne Houghton Mifflin Company, 2 Park Street Boston, Massachusetts. Price $5.00 With docuientary evidence new- ly accessible and 'a literary style woefully absent from the bulk of other historical writings, Professor Van Tyne fortifies his work withj not only scholarship, power, and dignity but also with a rare wit and pleasurable readibility. Professor Van Tyne's clear, cool, restrained portrayal of the Ameri- can Revolution is not a surprise to those who have read his first vol- ume of The Founding' Of The American Republic or his many ar- ticles and lectures on the subject. He was enlightening the country with the real truth about the siege of Boston and Bunker Hill when most authors of near-rabid, spread- eagle high school text books were infusing their works with biased, patriotic accounts. In contrast to these, Professor Van Tyne's pene- trating, non-biased account of deep-seated movements and con- temporary and ante-contemporary trends and influences cools the I t { Michigan will come to Ann Arbor Ieatd antierveistoricai of forts with refreshing confidencet for a three day convention. Our an'd surety. first word is one of welcome to the The disclosure of the Henry Clin- gentlemen who will discuss in ses- ton papers (recently purchased by sion here the problems of their pro- William L. Clements for the Cle- feasion ments Library) and the Lord' George Germain papers (also se- Journalism as a career has near- cured by the same donor for the ly rid itself of the monicker "game" Library) Professor Van Tyne feels and is taking on the garb of a re- lends cause for a revision of some spectable occupation for many opinions already set concerning the young men and women to under- actual progress of the Revolution. take. The majority of the younger The present volume traces the correspondents today are city-bred period from "The First Fruits of and college-educated individuals, Lexington," when "things that nev- and little competition is encounter- er happened, mere atrocities of the ed from the hit-and-miss bond mind, creations. of a maddened fan- salesman or shoe clerk who starts cy had as great influence as facts" work in some journalistic field as to the time of Burgoyne's surrender an easy way to make a living. at Saratoga and the advent of MOst accredited high schools in ( French aid, excited and urged to the country offer courses for the no little degree by American diplo- embryo journalists and several mats who seemed "to have under- years can be spent in the Universi- stood well the art of worrying both{ ties studying the ethics and funda- England and France to the eternal mentals of the profession. advantage of their native land." The current convention brings to Particularly enlightening and ex- Ann Arbor a great number of out- cellently done is the chapter on standing nmen in the newspaper '"The Forces of Union and Disun-! and publicity worlds. These indi- ion," wherein the author unravels viduals embody, for the most part, the reader the intricate and the highest ideals of the occupa- closely-knitted inter-colonial mis- tion, and epitomize the attributes understandings and jealousies. of all members of the profession. ' "Nor were State jealousies the only In them we see the result of many menace to unity, for the several years of intensive training and in sections nderstood each other as a great number of cases a iInNew England, that 'cho- or two of experience in the journal- sen company of men,' picked out, istic fields. as they piously believed, 'by a . . . strange contrivance of ,God' to be Tthese individuals who n~pfs- ... .-. Music And Drama Sanford Terry. ilutrated. Pub- lished by the Oxford university Press. This book published last year by the Oxford University Press may be somewhat of a relief to those an- noyed by Romain Rolland's recent autobiographico-critico - biographi- cal rhapsody on Beethoven. Rol- land smashes all the laws of bo- graphy and criticism to indulge his fervent worship of Beethoven, the God. And the result is frankly dis- concerting, however pleasing as a piece of creative work. Rolland is epic, lyric, philosophic and prophe- tic almost simultaneously. Un- doubtedly the pages in the Beetho- ven scores can kindle such sincere eloquence, but when it is unaccom- panied by judgment and discrim- ination, the result is pretty much confusion-with reference both to critical judgment of Beethoven's music and to factual presentation of his life. Rolland insists on soar- ing in the empyrean in search for Beethoven's soul; Thayey's biogra- phy and Ernest Newman's "The Un- conscious Beethoven" should have taught him that the man Beetpo- ven would never be found there. And I doubt whether one even gets a disciplined view of his music from so lofty a perch. Rolland is striving to give an account of Bee- thoven's creative moods-strictly imaginative material. He thus gets a chance to indulge his own lit- erary and creative approach to mu- sic. But for the most part he does j it at the expense of Beethoven. It is a sort of critical sin he has com- mitted in passing his own creative work off as "Beethoven copy." Charles S. Terry hasn't the am- bition of Rolland, but he has more conscience. He doesn't pretend to have "high erected thoughts" about the subject of his investiga- tion, though undoubtedly he was the greater composer. It is not that he isn't as interested as Rolland in his subject; for he has devoted his whole life to a study of Bach. He merely lacks the desire for self- exploitation which Rolland covers under the guise of sham mystic de- votion. He has an honest desire to make'the life of Bach contempor- aneous; so his precious self never appears. The result is a biography that is almost a model. It has been ac- cepted everywhere as the best life of Bach. Spitta's stupendous work, a sort of monument to Teutonic industry, he claims "obliterated Bach under a pitiless avalanche of exposition." Terry's work has no such fault. It is thoroughly docu- mented in all historical matters; it contains all possible material; yet the narrative is lucid and con- secutive. rBach's activities are pro- jected against the background of his suridundings, the perspective and the proportion of detail all ad- mirably planned. Terry displays admirable restraint in his account in several of the more vivid inci- dents in Bach's life-a talent to say the least unusual when the definition of biography has almost come to mean clever manipulation of details. The man that emerges from these pages is common enough, but clear' and human - a stout, sturdy bourgeois engaged in the tradesman's struggle for exist- ence, pugnacious in defending his rights, often bitter about the oppo- sition to him but always buoyant enough to float over a sea of diffi- culties that might, have submerged an ordinary creative genius. MUSICAL JOURNALISM A Musician at Large; by Harvey Grace; Published by Oxford Uni- versity Press. This small book is a collection from the writings of "Feste" a pop- ular critic in the Musical Times. Ordinarily, one would suspect such reprinting, because the attenuating circumstances connected with writ- ing for and satisfying a popular reading public mitigate against an output worthy of the dignity of serious covers. But this writer min- gles good commonsense with a kindly, inoffensive but subtle hu- mour to produce a lively body of 'discussion of many interesting problems. Grace is much more of a scholar than the continual note of facet- iousness in his style would imply. He writes amusing but illuminating c comments on Beethoven's Portraits I 1"he Smart Young Thing Dances. in GoodyTear's New Silhouette Fashions After the Game Goodyear's evening dresses have bids 'to all the dances after the Harvard game. ( You'll see them leading the fun at the most important affairs. For these dresses have the high waisted long skirted silhouette that is particularly becoming to,.the youthful figure. They're made of lovely, but not too perish- able materials so that they pack beautifully and can ride four on a back seat without any harm. And, best of. all, they're priced well within the slimmest allowance: French Room-Third For Evenng Frocks $25 to $75 Mt 1/1 1 l~ k - ... I A t '* 4 f Goodyear 's 124 SOUTH MftAIN Ts TRPIiTw TELE1PH-ONE 417 1 i ', , f t "f s.-.. -- --j.X- - " .4 .- , .. .. w r. THE ULTIMATE DESIDERATUM University discipline has been unpleasantly brought to the fore during the past week by the pro- bation of five fraternities and the bootlegging episode at Fletcher hall. At the same time, due to the change in the University's admin- istrative head, there has arisen in the public mind a confusion of ideas anent the disciplinary policy,. and the occasion demands a re- definition of The Daily's attitude toward such matters. At Saginaw President Ruthven said, "In judging the student there are two groups of values to be con- sidered-the educational and the moral. As I see it, the University can be entirely responsible for the first and little responsible for the second. . . . . I hold it to be evi- dent that the University is not and never can be a reform school... . Since that speech he has clarified his meaning to the effect that the, University will not take erring stu- dents in hand, paternally point out' this fault and that misdemeanor, and give them an'opportunity to mend their ways under the surveil- lance- of probation. Rather will; the University keep watch forj cracks in the student's moral fibreI and make such cracks the criteria of unfitness to receive the boon of higher education. In other words the student who demeans himself drunkenly, immorally, or lawlessly so that the University authorities learn of it, will shortly find his connection severed with this source of A.B. degrees. We realize that this is the ex- pedient policy-the policy best cal- culated to silence that state-wide body of the University's detractors who liken Ann Arbor to a huge brothel, ba, and gambling hell. We realize that the current species of journalist sees the moral deviations of a few all out of proportion to the constructive work of the great majority- of students. We realize,' too, that the present-day fanati- cism and 'intolerance of the coun- tern and furthering the ideals of journalism as a career, we owe re- spect. As the purveyors of news, and the formulators of impressions and opinions of the reading public a great deal of responsibility is left in their hands. And for the high- I est ideals of representation of facts and editorial material such individ- uals are qualified to be the leaders of the hundreds of thousands who are engaged intor are in training for the profession of journalism. - 0--- CHICKEN-HEARTED Rivalry between the two under- classes of the University-a rivalry that is supposed by tradition to be bitter and fierce-is scheduled to flame up into action Saturday mor- ning, when freshmen and sopho- mores will engage in their semi- annual games at Ferry field. But there will be very little, ri- valry and still less action if the practice of the last few years is carried out, for of late only a hand- ful of freshmen have turned out forI the games, and scarcely as many ,sophomores. - This is not as it should be. Rivalry between the i under-classes of the University is as natural as it is healthy, and class games should be events of im-. portance in the hearts of sopho- smores and freshmen. With the abandonment of old- fashioned hazing (a step which was apparently well-advised in that it eliminated an undesirable brutal element, in the razzing of fresh- men) all class spirit has apparently died. Now that the freshmen can not use their class games as an op- portunity for wreaking vengeance sifted wheat for planting an ideal commonwealth, hardly realized that they had done much of the sifting themselves by their bigoted opposition to the Immigration of men with a different faith." Early in the meetings of the Con- tinental Congress the Northern and Southern delegates "clashed re- peatedly" on the question of slav- ery and the use of them in the conflict. The forces of unity were almost{ equally active. Newspapers, pam- phleteering, correspondence, com- I mon defense necessity, all contrib- uted. "Moreover, there were the thousand minor things, like the threads that bound Gulliver, no one of them significant by itself, but in the aggregate strong poten- tial ties presaging future union. I increas~e in trade...., raw materials of one colony manufactured in an- other . . . . the post office . . Fraternal societies . . . . taverns .. .. no drouthy Amendment to keep i an honest citizen from drinking 'stoutly, the readiest way for a way- farer to recommend himself." The combination of brilliant writing skill and ready adduction of evidence in support of sound and illuminating theories will assure the permanence of Professor Van Tyne's work. His writing embodies all that Bacon meant when he de- Ifined his "full" man. And the art that his writing is proves definitely that Sidney was far from correct < when he assigned true history to the form of poetry. L. R. K. Detroit's first opera of the season y"ill be given by the American Op- '4 s x