1AGE OUR - nalistic duty. ~II4 *I~~I ~~I4~1 The cure for this vicious situa- Published every morning except Monday tion is not yet clear. The eyes of +during the University year by the Board initecutyaeattepeettm Control of Student Pt blcations. the country are at the present time Member of Western Conference Editorial I focused on our college towns, and it Association. is not unnatural that news from The Associated Press is exclusively entitled j these towns, particularly sensation- to the use for retbli':ation of all newsdis- al news, should be eagerly publish- patches credited to it ur not otherwise creditedp n this paper and the local news published ed by papers professionally sensi- rtive to that vital factor in their 'T' I MI CA N DAILY wows""_ I I- n ASTED ROLL' BIG DAILY SCOWP!! The Michigan DAILY is in possession of some facts which may cause yesterday's game to be annulled and may also cause a hemorrhage or two among the edtoria forces of that great journalistic publication, that acme of the pen pushing profession, the worthy Wash- tenaw Tribune. MR bI -u | Music And Drama -r Entered at the posto. .ce at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- tuaster 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 Editore................ierce Rosenberg News Editor.............aGeorge E. Simons Sports Editor......... Edward 11 Warner; Jr. Womien's Editor...........MT4arjorie Follmner Telegraph Editor......... Cassani A. Wilson Music and Drama.William J. Gorman Literary Editor... .awrence . Klein Assistant City Editor...... Robert J. Feldman Night Editors Fri'ik ECooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kaufman Walter W. Wilds burney miltams Reporters Dertram Askwith Lester May alen Bare David A. Nichol Maxwell :Bauer William" Page Nary L. Behyner [oward H. Peckhan Benjamin If .Berentsorlfugh Pierce Allan HI. Berkmnan Victor Rabinowitz S. :Beach Conger John D. Reindel Thomas AT. Cooley Jeannie Roberts John H. Denler Joseph A. Russell Itelen Domine Joseph Ruiwitch Margaret I'ckels Wiliam P. Sialzarulo Katharine Ferrin Ch rtes R. Sprowl Carl S. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton Jane Thayer Ruth Geddes Margaret Thompson Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin Jack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine Norris Groverman larold 0. Warren, Jr. ]:oss Gsustin Charles. White Margaret Barris G. Lionel Willens David B. 1Ifemtistead John E. Willoughby J. Culcen Kennedy Nathan Wise clan Levy Barbara Wright Rssell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit Dorothy Magee BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER i profits-reader-interest. It is re- grettable, however, that these newspapers must distort the college situation by giving such undue em- phasis to the unattractive features of college life. With a few notable exceptions they make little effort to play up such events as scientific discoveries, achievements in liter- ary research, games of oratory, or the promotion of academic effic- iency. Such things do not readily findl their way into the regular channels of news-gathering. Many univer- sities, among which Michigan is conspicuous by her absence, have established press bureaus with the avowed intention of publicizing their constructive efforts. These bureaus offer a valuable service to papers that wish to be accurate, truthful, and comprehensive in their presentation of the news, and information so distributed should* be honored more by those respon- sible for what the public reads. Michigan should have such a bureau to offset the unfavorable publicity she receives through her erring sons, And to help defeat that state-wide body of the univer- sty's detractors who find in the press a valuable aid to their cam- paign of imputing moral turpitude to Ann Arbor students. FOOTBALL'S HEALTHY CONDITION Ann Arbor's annual obeisance be- fore the great God Football ended! yesterday with no regrets. Michi- gan's season record is not one of championship calibre, but there is a large measure of consolation in having risen to play three of our strongest opponents to a standstill. To Harry Kipke, who built our game and fighting combination in the face of defeat and adverse crit- icism, our hats go off. It would be monotonous if Mich- igan always won the Big Ten foot- ball championship. It would also be monotonous if Illinois alwaysI Avon it. It is a novelty, a thrill, andC a real pleasure to see it go this year to Purdue-their first cham- pionship. Such a passing around of the laurels represents- a healthyj condition of our great American, game. It looks as though all the teams would be back next year doing business at the same stands withI a lively scrap for the championship. We venture the prediction that the' competition will be as keen and as popular as ever, and that Michi- gan, through Kipke's added exper- ience, will come out nearer the top. 0 Here are the facts. If, after read- ing them, you understand why the Iowa game should be discounted on the record books you are just about five steps ahead of us which is just what the night editor told me when I said I had a good news story about professional at Iowa. Department Managers Advertising............. 1iollister 1abley Advertising. ....Kasper 1.l-ialverson Advertising ........herwood A. Ujpton Service. .............. George A. Spater Circulation. ............. ..J. Vernor Davis Accounts.. . ...John R. Rose Publhcations...,............Geore Hamilton Assistants Byrne M. iBadenoch Marvin Kobacker James E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey Robert Crawford Thomas Muir haarry B. Culver George Patterson ' Thomas li. Davis Charles Sanford ! Norman Eliezer Lee Slayton Jaines Hoffer Joseph Van Riper Norris Johnson Robert Williamson Charles Kline William R. WorboysI Business Secretary-Mary Chase Laura Codling Alice McCully_ Agnes Davis Sylvia Miller liernice Glaser Hlelen E. Alusszlivhitej Hortense Gooding Eleanor alkinshawi Dorothea Waterman NIGHT EDITOR-HENRY MERRY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1929 VICTIMIZING STUDENTS There is more rejoicing in a newspaper office over one college student in jail than ninety and nine jailbirds who never tried to educate themselves. It is a pecul- iar fact about modern metropolitan journalism that a collegian whose irresponsibility gets him in the toils of the law is worth more and better space, and bigger and better headlines, than the most atrocious crimes of our toughest criminals. The Fletcher hall episode, for in- stance, made front page on most of the state papers whereas the seiz- ure of a similar quantity of liquor from an extra-mural bootlegger I would hardly have gotten into lead outside of Ann Arbor. The same is manifestly true of the Illinois fra- ternity house seizure and resultant dismissals. Few murders, in fact, have been as thoroughly publicized as the confiscation of some dozen gallons of liquor that happened to be in the possession of Illinois col- lege students. These instances could be multi-3 plied ad nauseam if any further proof were needed that college stu- dents are being victimized by the newspapers. Their names are be- ing publicly blackened and their right to an equal start in life jeo- pardized, partly because they of-. fend the law momentarily, and mostly because they are guilty of being college students. Dr. John- son's whimsical reference to the atrocious crime of being a young man" has been taken out of its context by the current species of city editor, and the irresponsibility of youth has been made a penal of- fense by the great court of the press. This subversion of justice, of which the great body of the press is guilty, would not be of such vital concern did it not indirectly de- fame all college students categori- cally, and the universities which{ +i Avo H++anl - Unfnrtinatny the The above picture shows Mr. Gahne Nicholas Dunnitt at the age of three, a most remarka- ble child to say the least. Evenj ait this tender milestone Mr. Dunnitt showedscrooked ten- dencies which is not what Mr. Fielding (Himself) Yost dikes as Mr. Yost is an ardent backer of sportsmanship at all times and if you don't believe sameI just ask Wieman. Dunnitt's first professional appearance in the world of sport will be here- inafter described as the nightI editor completely ignored thef facts and refused to run the story but what should I care and should I leave them outI just for a night-editor which is a f--l? No, a thousand times times no! As we have stated above, Mr. Dunnitt's first appearance on the professional athletic field occurred shortly after this picture was taken which probably accounts for the mustache. Picture to yourself the crowd which lines the croquet ground, with its banners, its color, its yells-Oh! those yells, how they send one back! Picture, if you can, I can't, Mr. Dunnitt as he stands there, brazen creature that he is. Little does he know that his present deeds will be his down- fall. Fearless and cool he awaits the opening whistle which will set the croquet match all aglow. TheI whistle shreaks, hoarsely. The bat- tle of the century, not to say of all time, is on. Strike after strike he lays upon the opposing team which is composed of his sister. In five minutes she is out cold. Drunk. Dead drunk. TOMORROW NIGHT: The Chan- ber Music Society of Ann Arbor pre- sents the Barrere Ensemble of New York in the first of its series of concerts, beginning at 8:15 o'c'ock! in the Mendelssohn theatre. VLADIMIR HOROWITZ A Review by William J. Gorman Vladimir Horowitz' second ap- pearance with the Detroit Symph- ony, this time with the Tschaikow- sky First Concerto, was again an occasion for wild enthusiasm. He was appearing as co-guest with Alexandre Glazounov, the last of the great Russians, whose visit was glamorous enough from extra-mu- sical considerations but quite un- important musically, as his con- ducting was not even subtle enough to conceal the fact that the orches- tra was imagining the Gabrilo- witsch of the rehearsal as conduc- tor and doing it rather lamely. It was Horowitz that made Friday's concert a brilliant one. He revealed the same poise and restraint in the Tschaikowsky Con- certo as last year in the Rachman- inoff. He possesses, of course, an amazing technique-a phenomenal ability to achieve facile octave- work and dynamic nuances at an intense pitch of vibratory power,1 to extract fortissimo without using brute force, to chisel fine incisive rhythms with the temper of steel springs, to maintain proportion of emphasis between hands. But all thin Horowitz uses strictly as equi- ment; never for exhibition. In fact, the peculiar merit and novelty of Horowitz's approach to the two concertos (neither of them very re- markable music) is the absence of personal exhibition. His tempo in the first movement was not start- lingly brilliant as that of Leonid Kreutzer and Rudolf Ganz, both of whom have used the Tschaikowsky Concerto in Detroit appearances for a pretentious display of pyro- technics; it was modest and com- fortable. For Horowitz' style is far re- moved from that of the hirsute thunderers who roll concertos into our ears to keep them ringing there for a week. His manner is cold and external and simple, and above all, honest. His is no opulent, satiny, linering touch seeking to stretch little moments out to eternity. Well-related forms issue in perfect definition, with no personal yearn- ings dripping from them. His mel- odic lines are all straight; there is no stopping for maundering pret- tinesses; the lines may lose some- thing in detail but as wholes they are effective. Horowitz gives an intellectual performance. His clar- ity and dignity and detachment forms in my mind the perfect type of artist. He uses the piano con- sciously, and strictly as an instru- ment; there is no attempt at merg- ing himself with the piano by the ecstasy of the moment of perfor- mance. Music, good or bad, is crushed out of recognition by pianists with heavy hands and no intellects, sur- face effects losing their charm by the insistence and stress in the style of brainless pianists, and the deeper movements never appear- ing. Horowitz has the intellectual grasp of his duty and consistently gives a lucid exposition of the writ- ing. His style represents a vitality that has its source in genuine feel- ing for the music but is organized by the intellect and perfectly and completely translated into terms of conscious piano-playing. When the music is mediocre (as I think in the case of both concertos) our reaction is curious, alert and reflective ra- ther than sensational. His recital in Ann Arbor this year, when un- doubtedly he will play good music, should be the most interesting one I in the series. DETROIT THIS WEEK:- Wilson: Eugene O'Neill's "Think- ing Drama" in nine acts begins a return engagement with Pauline Lord still heading the cast. Be- I cause of the difficulties in produc- tion that would almost fatally mil- itate against amateur performance, this may be the last time in some years that the Pulitzer Prize play will be available for local audi- ences. Cass: "Animal Cracker" opens tonight with the four Marx broth- ers. George S. Koumann, that clev- er journalist of the stage, has fur- nished the Marx Brothers with their finest medium so far. While I comedy Dredominates. Sam Harris New York Listed StocksQ Private Wire Connections with all Markets Securities boui ht or sold on commission basis Telephone 22541 Brown-Cress & Co. Iicorporated Investment Securities First Floor Ann Arbor Trust Bldg. on Christian Science 1y Petc V. Ross, CS.B., of San Francisco, Cali ma Nimber of the Board of Lectureship olThe Mother Church, Te First Church of Christ, Scien in, inm Boston, Massachusetts I "WIN I Sunday After-9noon, November 4, 1929 t 3:30 o'clock in th } Masonic Temple on. South Fourth Avenue The Public is Cordially Invited to AtLI 'ad - - - -- -- e -rr ." .., A !, notcing ,- M "F h 2- opening of a new branch Snore at 1113 S. J niversi t y Avenue. YOUR SUNDAY DINNERS are always VA uT enjoyable at the QTH Parrot EETListen to Bob Carson's Music "",he Parrot Speaks for Itself" READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! 4 SUNDAY,-.NOVENIBEIC4I. 1J' i First Chur th of Christ, Scientist. Ann A\bor, M i Announces a Free Lecture 1 Brg your shoe repairs where are are made. 'WO STORES 5 3lsForest Avenue I - 3 S. University Avenue I EAUTIFUL AND DIGNIFIED IS THIS YEAR'S MICHIGAN CALENDER With the Michigan Seal for cover decoration and twelve pages of Michi- gan Buildings and Campus Scenes in Photogravue. Put up in a heavy art envelope for mailing-Limited edition-75c. A UNIVERSITY .< i __ .. , _. _ 1[ Editorial Con ment AN ANN ARBOR RULE (Chattanooga News)I At the University of Michigan, an interesting rule has been imposed upon the members of the student body. It is that no student can own or have an automobile at the university, without the express per- mission of the authorities, a per- mission but rarely accorded. It is said that the rule has had a very beneficial effect upon scho- lastic standings at Ann Arbor. In fact, we understand that the aver- age standing of the students for the first year in which "tin lizzies" were under the ban was 7 per cent more than for the previous joy- riding year. This brings up an interesting question. What is the effect of automobiles on student life? We{ wonder if it is true that collegesI where cars are as common as text- books have a lower average grade1 than those where they are taboo? This brings up a further question. Do students go to college to get an education or do they attend be- cause it is the accepted thing to do? Many American universities arej much upset about this question. In' some, the suggestion has been made that we should have a three-ply, higher educational system; a coun- try club for those who like the at- mosphere; professional schools for those who want to learn how to use the tools of trade, and last of all, a university, where knowledge is sought for wisdom's sake by 4 r ~ ~ The picture shows little Gahne's father who has just come in from a flat-rat hunt. He is stewed to the gi's. He gives Gahne a'clip on the chin. Gahne retaliates with a right to the midsection, kicking out his father's three teeth. His mother is inside slapping the baby. She gives him a penny for having kicked out his fath- ther's teeth. He slaps her face. She hits him over the head with the baby. What a family they are! These are the facts. If anyone wishes to dispute them he might do so but it won't do him no good I as your truly is leaving town to- night on a big stew with ETAOIN SHRDLU and Hobbs. At any rate the reader will have the honor of S 4-. A. those who really have inquiring I having been in Ann Arbor on the minds as to the philosophy of life's day when professionalism was rout- scheme of things. ed. What a story that will make Michigan has put a ban on auto-, for your children and your grand- mobiles. Other schools have turn-Ichildren! If they are anything likeI ad thumbns nn n fraternities .1mine t~ sh-vilvo _ "Nwmen ovno'I S i ,{