+, THE MICHIGAN DAILY -basis for the discontinuance of the ,, e----- ,j , ,, " - futile and ulnedzfying town-and- f Published every morning except Moiday ,gown squabble. y e fondly hope ' Control o Stide P l at B a, that a more co-operative spirit will r g ,,,--- TMember of Western Ccnferen4'e f itorial result not only with regard to the iiE Association- landladies' real estate investments uIG The Associated Press is exclusively entitled but also anent the proposed sew- SHOW to the use for republication of all news dis- ae disposalplant, the assessment W eatches credited to it or not otherwise credited g dp pnmell, it was a great game, and n this paper and the local news published of fraternity houses, and police something to write home about. treatment of students. In view of Entered at the posto..ce at Ann Arbor, the close and ineSCa able Inter- Michigan,sas second class matter. Special rateap of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- dependence of the city and the Un-' toaster General. ' Subscriptionby carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.so. iversity, it seems to The Daily that Sfficesr Ann Arbor Press Building, May- a studied avoidance of antagoniSmI Oard Street. g Phones: 'Editorial, 492s; Business, 2ai4. should be practiced. If they are to EDITORIAL STAFF progress at all, the University and the city must progress together - Telephone 4925 I not in opposite directions. :1 MiiicAnd Drama ~ 0-------- -- --- ILTRiOIT THItS WiEK: Shubert-Detroit: Last week of the' popular al-star revue with Jack Pearl and Aileen Stanley. Wilson: Lew Leslie's ever-popu- lar tuneful revue, "Blackbirds." Detroit Civic: Willard Mack's in- teresting dramatization of I-f. Vany Loan's story, 'rhe Noose. Orchestra Hall: Thursday, Fri-F day, and Saturday oa this week the second appearance in Detroit of I the American Opera Company, of- fering Faust, Carmen, Madame Butterfly, and Yolanda of Cyprus. FIy EWith Flo to Minnesota Game Make Reservations Now Phone Ann Arbor 6466 FLO FLYING SERVICES INC. Ann Arbor Municipal Airport I S i ( S .Rent! Forest Plaza Apartments Only seven apartments are left in Ann Arbor's newest and finest build- ing. Gas, electricity, re- frigeration, Water - all furnished. All floors. carpeted. Furnished or unfurnished as desired. Location is unexcelled. 341 E. Liberty Street Twvo five-room and one four - r o o m apartments left in this fine building. E 1 e c t r i c refrigeration. Ail floors completely carpeted. We own this building ourselves and g u a r antee the finest possible service and maintenance. Excellent location; easily access- ible to both University and downtown districts. N'Jatny other rentals, in both homes and apart- rhents, $50 and tcp. See us. _ o MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY EVICTION. r Y re f I B uildin g set back Editor...................George C. Tilley City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg News Editor a ......George E. Simons Sports ditor ........l dyard I,. Warner, Jr. Women's :Edcitor.. .........MVarjorie IFollmer Telagraph Editor.........Cassan A. Wilson Multsic and D~ranma........Wt illiam J, Corman uiterary Editorn.........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor...... Robert J. Feldman Now that campus perturbation anent the recent eviction of stu- I dent residents from Fletcher hall has died down, there is time for im- passionate consideration of the facts of the case.' Examination of the situation re- veals that the action of the Dean's office must be considered not as an I AMERICAN ILLUSTRATION A Review by L.ee Blaser It scarcely seems possible, though, AI that anybody remained home, judg- I The cream of American illustra- ing from the mob that packed the I tion hangs unattended in the Arch- so-called new stadium. And when itectural lobby. It i there through 88,000 people are jammed together i the courtesy of the American Fed- in one place the resulting circus eration of Arts. To those who re- is almost as interesting as the gard illustration as the hack work game. of the lowly American artist, it s * * !66n~ilrA rnanvpa anina anf. c-nnlr Night Prank E. Cooper William C. Gentry Charles R. Kaufman Editors Henry 3. Merry Rtobert 1. Sloss This is the Band you want to make' your party a big success. SIX SNAPPY ENTERTAINERS Ben's Blue Blowers ccWe Satisfy" 4310 Phones 6749 Joe Benjamin, Manager from the street, is beau- tifully landscaped and there is plenty of sun- shine and air on all sides. Elevator service. Rentals reasonable. BROOKS-NEWTON, INC. Reporters Bertram Askwith ,ester hay Helmn Barc David i I. Nichol Maitwell Sauer William Page Mary L. Behymer IHoward 1H. Peckham Benjaminr H. Berentsor- high Pierce Allan HI. Berkman Victor Rabinowitz S. Beach Conger *ohn D. Reindel Thomas M. Cooley / *Jeannie Roberts John H. Denier Jfoseph A. Russell 3elen Domine *osi-ph Ruwitcll 1M'argaret Eckels \'Villiaos P. Salzarnlo atharine aerrin -Chares I2. Sprow Carl S. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton Jane Thayer Ruth Geddesu :Margaret 'I'hompsou Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin l'ack Goldsmith. Elizabeth Valentine orris Groverman Harold O. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret Harris C. TLionel W'illens David B. Hempstead John 1 E Willoughby . Culen Kennedy Nathan Wise can bevy iarbara VWrig:ht ussell F. McCracken Vivian Zimit Dorothy Magee BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Marnager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising............ . Hlollister Mabley' ..Advertising ....Kasper l1i. ltalverson Advertising .......... herwood A. lipton Service .. . ..Ceorge A. Suater Circulations.... ........j. Vernon Davis Accounts ............... ....:Kohn R. Rose Publications ....... . ..... ...%eorge lamilton Assistants attempt to quelch unfavorable pub- - i nua coveya p~sn ror ticity which followed the police raid Take the gents, for instance, who j But those who bemoan American . stagger into their seats and im- decadence in the axts are not us- at the dormitory, but as a neces-r sary' disciplinary step. Not only mediately fall asleep, overcome, as ually those who have any vestige it were, by excess of spirits. of appreciative knowledge. was Fletcher hall known as a liquor'; dispensary but the dormitory is * Among the canvasses on the line said by University officials to have Or take the opposite type-those are oils by three of our leading il- had an unsavory reputation for a: who stagger just as much but who : lustrators: N. C. Wyeth, Dean long time, keep more than alive during the 'Cornwell, and Pruett Carter. Of . progress of the game and disrupt major importance is one typifying The existence of such conditions half a section with their mrad Wyeth's adventurous contribution can be traced clearly to the fact cheering and jumping-jack procliv- to illustration. Subdued color in- that Fletcher hall has been operat- ities. tensifies the emotional appeal and ed without the guidance of expe- * * * tense beauty and gives a breath of ienced supervisors. When no chap- Yes, just take them and put them wild adventure. One is perfectly erones are in residence at a dormi- away somewhere. We had both conscious that something is about tory which is as large as Fletcher types in our neighborhood Satur- I to happen;. but subtly so. Dean hall and which houses as hetero- day afternoon and what we missed Cornwell paints as no other man genous a group of individuals, the of the game was lugubrious. The in the field; he is at once bold and unruly tendencies of wayward stu- j quiet gent in front of us who slept subtle. His characterizations are dents have free play, to an undesir- through the first three quarters final and everywhere there is sure- I ably large extent. finally woke up at the beginning ty. The two paintings hung are far It seems unfortunate that Flet- i of the last quarter and put on a from his best. Vigorous, forceful cher hall was ever allowed to be demonstration of fervor that made form brings out the advantage of opened under the conditions of the efforts of the cheer leaders pale monochrome in subduingextrane- management which existed there. into insignificance. "Well, folks," ous ideas. In direct comparison is If proper supervision had been in- he announced as he stood up, "I've the wistful anxiety of Pruett Car- sisted upon from the outset, a just come to, and I'm glad of it! ter's offering; he- paints a mellow group of more than 50 students Let's have a cheer now for good and subtle atmosphere of doubt I would not now find it necessary to old Lafayette. Like this: Rah, rah, with a masterful broad stroke; a move their belongings, in the mid- Lafayette! Good ole Lafayette! difficult problem for a death bed dle of a semester. That was my high school." 'scene. +. i Broo.zs Bldg. Phone 22571 C i. }} 1 S Raymond Campbell Iamhes E. Cartwright Robert Crawford Harry B. Culver Thomas M. Davis Norman Eliezer Doi~nald Ewing a essloffer orris Johnson Charles Kline Marvin KXohcker Laura Codling : . Bernice Glaser Hortense Gooding Anna Goldberg Lavrence Lucep Thomas' Muir George Patterson Charles Sanford l.ee Slayton Robert Sutton Roger C. .ohoe ;tnselyh Van Riper" Robert WTlhamson W iiam R. WVorhoys A lice-.MaCully."- Syrvia 1Miller HFelen E. Musselwhite [leanor Walkinshaw Dorothea Waterman ' But Fletcher hall may become a valuable experimental station, if it is reopened in the future under a? new system of management. Uni- versity officials, by cooperating with! the owners of Fletcher hall, may, use the building as a laboratory inj which to work out a series of prin- ciples regarding dormitory man-, agement. Such a set of principles would prove of great value in do-' termining University policy in mat-, ters of expansion of the dormitory' system. It would show whether. dormitories can be made to serve, a beneficial purpose in student life. The cheer that followed was me- diocre and the instigator sadly be- wailed the lack of enthusiasm for good ole Lafayette. "I'm losin' con- fidence in you people," he stated, and sat down." * . :j Two other gents, imbued withI practically the same spirit, failed to see even one play during the en- tire game. They purchased all the peanuts available and spent the two hours and a quarter throwing the bags in divers directions withj shouts of "Beano!" whenever a bag made contact with the face of an innocent spectator. When the sup- NIGHT'EDITOR-HENRY MERRY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1929 ANN ARBOR AND THE UNIVERSITY Despite the hopeful sabotage of Cat s o piy'0ofpeanuts beca ehate' our ecuiarcontmpoary thei us O nnOn they took to pounding each other's our peculiar contemporary, the r U derby until nothing but pulp re- Washtenaw Tribune, the contract Contributorsarceasked to he brief, mained." ' , confining themselves to less than 300 for the girls' dormitory on Observ- words it possible. Anonymous corn. * miinications will be disregarded. The f atory street has been signed, sealed, names of communicants will, however, After which they took turns ad delivered As a result some eregarded as confidential, upon re- crawling up and down the aisle, and delverd. A'' reult ~me; quest. Letters published should not he construed as expreesing the editorial growling like bears. 450 girls will be taken out of league opinion of the Daily. houses next fall, and a correspond- Yes, sir, the game isn't every- ing number of landladies will be THE MINUS 15-YARD LINE. thing. forced out of business. We hope 'Without a doubt most of us have* that these landladies have not been noticed a gradual decline in Michi- Speaking of peanuts, did you given a false sense of security by gan's attitude toward athletics in ever notice the peanut venders aft- the erroneous propaganda of their, ty sper the game? Before the game it's" selfstyled favorite organ, and ast few years. This epecially"Peniiuts, ten cents a bag"-after- therefore neglected to think of applies to football. Where is that wards .it's "Peanuts, for gawd's their future financial arringe- old Michigan spirit that used to sake, peanuts!"t ments. Now that the wolf can be pull Yost's "point-a-minute teams": lieard yelping a few doors away- through back in 1901. While we were making the above much as he yelped last spring when People come here to our gaines I observation we were very nearly the same dormit'ry caused such de- and ask us why Michigan can't get trampled to death in a rush for one spair-we wonder how much ad- off some good yells like the other of those flowers that came para- vantage they have taken of the six schools do. Is the U. of M. such a chuting earthward from the flying months' respite then won for them large institution and so aristocrat- I hot house. What kind were they by the Tribune and such auxiliar- ic that it can't give a few good yells 'anyway?, ies as the divine being and cer- and sing some of the school songs Thy oud ' tain technical problems in the fi- at the football games? And yet I They couldn t have been mums nancing of the structure. don't believe' that the student body Ibecau allto he muns we ever pa More. seriously, it is regrettable as a whole lacks that old fighting game fell apart before we even got that the Tribune has taken the spirit which was manifested back inside the stadium. dormitory, the certainty of whose I in the good old days. Where the nd:hdm erection was never officially repud- trouble really lies is in the way the And now that the excitement is fated, as an occasion to prolong students are mixed in with the a o a the erineme and embitter the town-and-gown general public at the games. I know shut up theam hoers, a shutup ue alamityholrs bc squabble which President Ruthven i it takes some courage for me to j seat drivers and armchair critics, has sought to smooth over. Ann yell when I'm sitting among a lot what faces us? Midsemesters! Arbor and the University are in- of outsiders who don't know the -. terdependent, no matter how much yels andr who probably woldn't' the city may try to shake off this 'yell if they did know them, and I'nt dependence by attracting industries not in the least inclined to be timid,' or how much the University may I especially at football games. try to shake itself free by erecting s yt g . dormitories. Restaurants, haber- This is my fourth year on the dashers, taxi companies, amuse- compus and my ticket for the Ohio ment enterprizes, book stores, and 'game was on the corner of the sta- , ment entaboptrthesnusokisteenesrdnd the like, will always derive a profit- dium, about the minus fifteen yard able trade from the students. Ann line. If all the seats between the - Arbor's citizens should' realize that thirty yard lines are reserved for This is a photo of a student burn- the problems of the University are the alumni, bond holders, and those i ing the mid-night oil. The student, their problems, the losses of the1 having a pull with the Board of is at the movies. University their losses, and the Athletics, why shouldn't the stu- . * x : progress of the University Ann Ar- I dents and their guests have the ANOUNCEMENT bor's progress. There is little va- seats between the zero and thirty Lark says he is resigning for theI - - ~rT i.~o.. . L n. ai . c . - L~, .-__1 Two crisp portraits by Ober- hardt deserve special mention. A charcoal so simple in use and yet so effective is inspiring. Each char-- acter is vivid and concise. Each stroke tells a part of the story. In water color there is more va- riety. Raleigh and Gruger are, as is expected, outstanding in bril- liance of expression. Henry Ral- eigh could very easily Ie the guid- ing star of young talent in the field. His types are superb, his hu- mour subtle, and his use of media 1 superb. In the one illustration al-j lowed us he chooses to work with dry brush and water color. The forms round and sway under his brush and the secret of success in illustrating in brush distinctly shows in his silhouetting. F. R. Gruger refuses to let action inter- fere with the pale determination and gentility of his characters. That unity of character is perhaps the greatest criticism of his work. The one water color and pencil technique is a star for young archi- tects to set their technical eyes I upon. Sincere unforced simplicity sets one of Haitland's advertisements, a scene with a rhapsodic young lady at the piano. Benda goes flat characteristically with a charcoal t and color treatment. Somehow it 1 seems to me that a Hopi snake dance should carry more than a long-eyed stylistic emotion. For the Javenese dance it is in good form. George Illian can be geometric and dynamic with impunity because of his care in choosing the subjects and his habit of doing them in sub- dued washes of clear color. Gar- ret Price is represented with a very typical cover for Life. In pen andM ink they run to humour and cari- cature. Ralph Barton of the New Yorker, and whatever, paints a knockout caricature of the potent American woman in his Machinal. Gluyas Williams is side splitting in his subtle Benchley humour; while I the Levy caricature of Alexander Woolcott is mildly ridiculous. Ho- ward Willard showing a forceful play of line and form with his able pen is in direct contrast to florid Charles Dana Gibson whom you may like. He is insipidly moral, dotingly stolid, and unconvincingly 1 flashy.. Naturally there is much that is i bad in this show; we have simply disregarded that minority. But we do hold a brief for the support of American illustration. The very exigencies of the profession pre- vent the- illustrator from wander- j ing into the bogs of abstract in- sincerity to prattle of obtuse sense Just give this little merry-maker a hand o. :'II k \ 'Vj 1 r ,<. A v T AKE a Columbia portable phono- graph with you, and wherever you are-in your rooms or fraternity house, on week-end trips or at home-it will give you countless hours of royal enter- tai nment.- Your- dealer will show you an instru- ment that will make you jump right.in- to the Columbia cheering section-the Viva-tonal Columbia Portable. It has the tonal beauty and volume of an ex- Record No. 1938-D, 10-inch, 7 . SWEETHEART'S HOLIDAY . ox TrOIS RIUcCGABLE KISsABI. .O. Ted Wallace and His Camnpos Boys. Record No. 1916-D, 10-inch, 75c T LovE YoU-(Incidental Singingby T wled wis). LEWISAD4 BUI.Es-Fox Trots-Ted Lewis and His Band. pensive cabinet mnachine. It is uxii- riouxsly fitted--yt, it costs only $50! If you like your melody in a more elaborate case, there's the electrically " operated Columbia Portable at. $60. And 11 you want yow; music at less cost per note, there's anolier cork jng Columbia Portable (or only $.25! Whiiche-ver you select, be sure to slip these new di rs in'the record com- part merit! - R4a-ord No. 1869-D, 10-inch, 75c SINc.JN' IN THErfl RAIN-(from Talking Picture IPvodu ciion "Hollywood Revue of 1929"'). ORANCE BLOssOM TTME-(from Talking Picture Prodacuion "Hollywood Revue of 1929'). 1ocal--Ukulele Ike-(Cliff Edwards). Record No. 1922-D, 10-inch, 75c MoAr'N' Lost -(from "The Little Show"); SwE.TNEss-I'ocals--Lee Morse and Her Blue Grass i3oys. I - a /. ____ m ~ ..-~. U - - ~ ,~. I d !