;4 'r,, i i T f CA Z~{~:Y~ 11! I~?Th 4 .'~ a F ithiFt7w.i every miorning except Nilonday c-i gthete~'(Jiverf ilty year by the Board in control of Stwient 'tbhlications. MJember of Western Conference Editorial) Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis- patches credited to it or not otherwise credited tn this paper and the local news publishedl herein. Entered at the posto. .ce at Ann Arbor, Micbigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master. General, :subscripstion by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50.1 Offices: Anti Arbor Press Building, May-1 itard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EI~[TORIAL .STAf1FF' MANAG TI dO EDtJ~ITOR parallelled many times when no _ . v LJ1:A N.lLJi O IFunds have been available for sonmA . - 1 . M - f i iit"Yi1 of the pressing needs of the Unl- ii out I.) rt A: versity points to the wisdom of the I~A ~~cAc . 'Toledo alumni group's donation. .ERMAN AN A . i WuK lO LMN The condition which will arise from' n. vfs this action will show a tremendous NBLPIEWNE Monday.#: improvement in the status of stu, hms a: a encoe on ft~e in a ~i 1iiuPatcMvmzt - hoa "Manha be cosnI onaEsselstynoftepaoacf Solfege Imp:rovisation, Piano, dents in straitened circumstances: from a group containing many of ulty of the School of Music will give Coin ostiotn it will allow them. to concentrate the world's foremost writers to re- a recital in the School of Music NORM AI, TRAINING their efforts on study while in the 192.Noel I= alcroze Certificate Provides University and at the same time ceive the 12 oe prize for lit-I Auditorium, beginning promptly atI New Profession for College and Music Iwill put them under no strain ini erature. The amount of the award 18:15 o'clock. Miss Esseistyn is a Pol es onn~qett paying of h . lgtin o this year is $46,299, and it will graduate of the School of Music ; PAUL B.(aPPLE, Director j offth. oliatinor9 Fast 59th St., New York -=obe presented to Mr. Mann along' under Albert Lockwood and has Vlztr 1357+ ACTIVITIES VS. STUDIES with the other four winners of; supplemented her study in Ann Ar,- General advice was interspersed prizes on December 10, the anni- bo b polngd-tuybo-- hi -- . with technical information in the versary of the death of Alfred No-;cutyak1arodUdrJJi' program recently given the conven- bel who established the, foundation. Nv ed editors of Michigan high schools. Th le author's best knownt boob~, Bud- hvne h a ~a~di' IL( Aogthe former there was none lenbrooks, a saga of the patrician !qitently as acc'oi-panist for solo ;ti - Imore rsound arnd apropos than the German farnily, was published In! tists like Martinelli and Louise 1--' warning against' the dangers; of too; 1901, It went through fifty edi- ?I r he program which she has f it .t '}tv 1-iz~ (v t i. (bs great a participation in extra-cur-tions in a decade, but it wts rnot peae1o h caio sa o-w ~.i ericular activities, by T. Luther Pur- until 1924, that it appeared in a 1 d, personnel director of the U~ni- translated American edition. AtI low~s: C(I t~q~I versity. that time it had gone through 151 Prelude and Fugue in E Flat,'iu vi: Nine-tenths of the students who; editions in Germany. Minor ...................BHach take a prominent kart in outside l Sonata in D.......Scarlatti rrts ~e24541 functions, particularly dramatics,i The winner of this year's Nobel ;Sonata Op. 90..........Becethoven Bcw Crs & Co in high school fail to make passing foundation award springs from. theI rw - esCo grades during the first :semester in # highest and finest stratum of Ger- EtudeF Minr.........Chopi college, Mr. Purdom said. This ad- E man middle class society,.lHe wasI Nocturne C sharp minor ... Chopin ' vice was quite appropriate, as thee born at Lubeck, on the Baltic, ofI Waltz A Fiat............. ChopinI :ttorris it possible. Anonymous con- will be heard in Ann Arbor for the l munications will be disregarded. The a state of disdainfulness, and to names of communicants will, however, oet h ocuinta qi second time in the Choral Union be 'regarded as coufiderrtial, upon rr cm otecnluinta qt series , in a program of madrigals, clu~at. Letters published should nut be ? librium can be found for himself opinion o the Daily.j through a kind of contentment'bles nzetofheEiat- (about his loneliness. This is Thomas a eid tla n pns W~lY NO STUDEN SEATS Mann yearning- after his ideal of ;sre refl ogmdr a reconciliatinDbetweenAArt nd'glish and French part songs. BETWEEN GOALLINES? Life.reclaccn eptwenfeat, wici This organizatio n has gradually Life Heaccptsdefet, hic isbuilt up a reputation as one of the To the editor: at once his power and success, but ms ouaro hIonetsae Now that Mr. Tillotson has also his natural limitation. The Their opreahei oneelopmet spread the entire machinery of thei impression that is in the mind of of c unacmcompanied id eelopeng- present ticket allotment system be-; the reader after finishing the book Itig and their specialization in Eliz- fare us and has shown us just is one of disillusionment, though it abta uia r evste where we sit and who sits where we should not be interpreted that Mr. wtotrvl nti neetn Iwould like to, I should like to ask (Mann is a weak-kneed sentimental- withurivalsoinhsicntTeestng .one or two fore questions, per-! ist. A strong sense of irony savescrtiinHlAutoumbg- taining to the why of where the' him from this.; ninm nroarnt1 at.8:5 o 'clock. store at 1 113 S.. U niversit y Avenue. r Bring your shoe repairs where shoes are made. Tw-STORES 534 Forest Aventle 1113 S. University Avenue. i I Dainty feminine things that appeal to every lover of chaf-ming personal belongings. are here to be chosen. There is the most exquisite lingerie in crepe, satin and glove sillk --mauny of the lovely pieces ' from France. Negligees too --and warm quilted robes as practical as they are attractive. Ensembles 'in pajamas--mod- ern, sophisticated, smart--will atppeal to the fastidious wo- mnan. HIosery Handbags C~ostumie Jewel)-y Boutdoir Dotis IHaudk crchie f s (;Ilovc. I.'L: Er \ 1 4 3, S I. } F A II J \I 1 ! , A '-°' :a " ' 1. r--- <.w ;' I ' y1 , j ,, fti; ,:; rv t°' . . f 1- mY ..:. WVart 'Ads tRay C. J7-HUTZL os Main, at Liberty l.aura Codling iSrice Glaser Hortense CGooding Arima Goldberg. Alice TMcCtilly Sylvia MIiller II den E. Mt-ssIwhite Elear r\Vallinshaw I )oiohea Watrermanj 4 Np?'ht Editcw,--C. R. KAUFMAN SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 17, 1929 PERMANENT ASSETS During the last 'generation col- leges have grown from small schools catering to a favored few to great institutions where almost everyone desirous of obtaining an education can 'do so. The principles of de- mocracy upon which this nation was founded are coming to the fore in this field, at least, and it is to be hoped that the same spirit avid spread into other fields where big- otry and intolerance- are so obvious. Even education for the masses, however, has decided limitations. Many ambitious young men and women are prohibited from attend- ing universities because they lack the money which is requisite for financing- themselves during four or more years in such institutions. The time allowed by the summer Vacation months for earning. such mon~ey as they need is not nearly sufficient to carry them through the year. It is a well known fact that stu- dents who are working their way through college do not benefit nearly as much from their studies as 'others who are not faced with this double responsibility. Most educators, while admitting the fact that those who work while they study are probably the most deserv- ing of real admiration, discourage 9the practice.:-The physical and mnental "strain.i iinosed upon these t detia ~ I~ itr'im sotr-imno-nt to allay= 3 . 1 students are given tickets. * .Mr. Tillotson has proved by his This German novelist has been All week : "facts, figures, and charts" that chosen as a representative, presum-; An exhibit in Alumni Memorial there are no seats between the 30 ably, of the best in literature of ' all of the work of some sixty or yard lines open to students. I can the present day. But the simple ' seventy local or Detroit artists uin- not dispute this, yet I still do not fact is that Mr. Mann is not of der the auspices of the Ann Arbor see why the students are relegated 4 the present. Perhaps, the selection Art association. I to their one section at the north is just another of those practical ;B:B1t end of the west stand, surprises which the Academy is so )Ttl Accrdig t Mr Tilotonth fond of unveiling. However this Music: 'Stden Conci pikedthi loa-may be, Mr. Mann is not expressing Percy Grainger, the noted Aus- StonBt osci thaedthinecaiy- his relations to the present civil- tralian-American composer and pi- makneButdaetihanneinsahis ,writns e I a nist, will present his first Detr~oit maeit unchangeable? prd" fb-oecluewihrecital in sever-al seasons at Orches-j Why, I ask, must the student sec- has almost entirely disappeared, ; tra Hall. Mr. Graingerfs first group; tion be so placed as to put over half and his art is the reflection of the1 includes three Preludes and Fugues of the students behind the goal! decline of tradition. Not that he from the "Well Tempered Clavi-; posts? Could not the students be i has not tried to adapt himself to chord" of Bach. His second group! placed on both sides of the thirty. the notions, tereadcnet contains Chopin's Barcarolle, Op.M yard lines within which they can ;which have come about by the War, 60, and his Sonata in B Minor, Op.. not sit, and would not this ar- fo hsh a oe u ecn 58. The third will be devoted to 'rangement have its advantages? I not understand the modern world! modern music, Ravelrs "Ondine" Under this plan, half the student which has upset the old order of ' and Debussy's "Homage to Ram- i section would start from the south iel.If antcet itr I eau," concluding with a first. per- thirty yard line and extend south,; of these times in his art, although formance in Detroit of' rangr' surrounding the faculty section; ! he has tried in his Magic Moun- "The Hunter in His Career," hi~s :- while the other half would occutpy tain. His place is as an interpreter I latest adaptation of an English bal- its present position, exten~ding , of the decadence; he expresses the lad.. north from the north thirty ard thought of another day. Tuesday : line. Under this arrangemern, no students would be forced around MRlS. WHtl'ARTON - The Detroit Bach Choir opens its, the turns behind the goal posts. season at Orchestra Hall with a APPEARS THIS WEEK varied selection of choral works. The half of the section which, at Edith Wharton has circulated Thril efv.goptoaln the arvrd ame vieed he on-this week through her publishers!I thirteen numbers. It is the most test from undesirable turn and end a new and lengthy novel .entitled!abtou rgama e +atmt seas wuldbe lacd i th se- Hudson River Bracketed." It is ed by this interesting Detroit or- tios jst out ofthethity ardthe study of, 4 youth who not only± ganizatidn. The closing numb er on line. Besides the advantage of giv- I wanted to be a writer, but who ac- th rga s'inFseBr s ingthestuent beterseas, histually was one. It is the picture of ItUnser Gott," Bach's stirring choral arrangement of tickets would con- I a literary genius. The unusual title stigfrLte' yno h 'cnrae the Mch iganrooeso come-s from an old book of archi- Reformation. It is the first Amer- boh idsofth cerig.Leture of the 1890's which de- lip nn~fomnepoftf 1icwo rt'of VTV VI. l I, Vl Vf14 VV AF+v++ v au~tc~a s uv~t'~tL V tll ' Of course, some one would havej scribes the indigenous manor the best results to be shown. : to suffer so that the students might houses of the Hudson of that per- In 'iew f tese act, th an get better seats. It is true that the E iod with their adornments of fret nouncement that the University ofI alumni clu~b sections and other al-; work. An old house of that type Michigan Club of Toledo will pre-1 lotments reserved for taxpayers plays an important part ini the sent a fund of $150,000 to be used I would have to be moved to bringI story. Ini it the hero, a boy fromI for loans to students in all collegesI the students south of the thirty ( the west who has never known the of the University is one of the most I yard line. But, on the other hand, dignity of aged things and cultures, gratifying announcements of thet under the presen-t system the stu-! or the beauty of the intellect, meets year. dents suffer. The problem thus set- 4 for the first time in his life some- Many tequests have been given' ties down to a question of who isi one to whom culture was the bloodI the University during its long life,; to occupy the end seats and who! in her veins. In it he ha~s his init-t but most of these have been pre- i is to sit on the field. To my mind, ial experiences with the beauties of sented with a stipulation that theyj as a student, the students deserve' poetry. be- used for buildings, scholarships,! preference. and Mr. Tillotson seems R f. E. M. and other narrowly limited purpos-j to wish to give it to them. May I es. This donation, however, will 'ask why, then, this plan should not Alfred Kreymborg's new book, -1 J l f t !f 1 I i i h i f i . ! I I ,t R j I Bach's. Thursday: A concert by the Detroit Sym- phony Orchestra under Ossip Ga- brilowitsch with two Russian as- sisting artists, Alexander Glacou-, nov, composer and guest-conduc- toadVaii ooiz nist. Mr. Gabrilowitsch opens the concert with the Rimsky-Korsakov I tone poem 'Sadko," Op. 6. The sec- ond number, the Glazounov Sixth Symphony, brings the composer to the podium to conduct, his first ap- pearance with an American orches- tra. The Sixth Symphony is the A iI I