T H r Id I C H I C., AIN . T-TI'MAY, Bron, IMER -1, i;211? TN?' TviTCNTCIAN fli ILY TrTYV ~ Published c"very morning except Monday during the Unversity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republi,ation 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- taster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building May- aard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 2f2t4. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editor ................,...George C. Tilley City Editor ................ Pierce Rosenberg News Editor. .............George E. Simons Sports Editor 7......Edward L. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor ..........Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editor......... Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama........ William J. Gorman Literary Editor.......... Lawrence R. Klein Assistant (City lEditor .......Robert J. Feldman Night Editors Frank E. Cooperg henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kaufman Walter W. Wilds Reporters not be carried beyond the fresh- man year. It stunts the develop- ment of self-reliance and self-dis- .cipline, both of which will be of equal importance with academic achievement when the student, finds himself unshielded by his al- ma mater and at grips with the world for a living. To us the new Harvard dormi-! tories, disguised as "inner colleges" ! that are hardly more than a dig- nification and moralistic extension' of the Harvard tutorial system, are significant only as more paternal- ism and increased floor space. After all, Harvard would have been ra- ther silly in the eyes of the world to turn down Mr. Edward F. Hark- ness' proferred eleven millions - even though he tied up the giftJ with the requirement that it mustj be used for student-faculty "hous- es." PROFESSIONAL SECRETS Senator Capper of Kansas has handed the Senate a mild seda- tive in the form of a bill designed to exempt Washington newspaper- men from the necessity of divulg- ing the source of confidential in- formation before any committee of Congress. This was closely follow-, ed by the introduction of a fur- ther measure which, if passed, would enable the correspondents in Washington to refuse to appear as witnesses before any Congressional investigating body. The former of these bills would easily prove at boon to the good estate of news- papermen generally; the latter,: however, would serve only to deter the investigators from an accurate,' I and sometimes exclusive, avenue ofE information. 1, P1 I- About Books r !- - J Usklkdr REVOLUTIONARY MONDAY: The great British PLANS FOR INLANDER film success "Widecomhe Fair," a Afilm version of the novel by Eden The Inlander is a problem. The Philpotts at the Lydia Mendelssohn Board of Control has always found Theatre beginning at 8:15. it so. At one time, it has receivedTHE LENER STRING QUARTET the support of the Board, at an- As is so frequently the case with other it has been thrown out as a organizations as internationally decadent proposition. Subscribers known as the Lener String Quar- have been dissatisfied at times, at tet, the story of the growth proves others they give it favorable re- a fascinating study in the inter- view. But comments for the most rity and earnestness of the artistic part have been of dulled indiffer- 'life Each member of the quartet is a product of the Budapest Academnv. Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Barc David il. Nichol Maxwell Bauer William Page Mary L. Behymer )oward It. Peckham Benjamin fl. l-erentsoilugli Pierce Allan It. Berkman Victor Rabinowitz S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts ohn 11. Denler Joseph A. Russell Ilelen Domine ;Josep~h R uwitch Margaret Ickels William 1. SaTharulo Katharine Ferrin Charles R. Sprowl Carl S. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton lane hayer Ruth Geddes Margaret Thompson Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin Tack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine '[orris Groverman I'arold 0. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret I-arris 'G. Ionel Willens David B. [empstead 'ohn 1I Willoughby . Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise ean Levy Barbara Wright nssel E. McCracken Vivian Zimit Dorohy Magee BUSINESS STAFF Teliephone 21214 'BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising .............. lollister Mabley Advertsing.............Kasper I. lalverson Advertising ..............Sherwood A. Upton Service....................George A. Spater Circulation..................1. Vernor Davis Accounts ...................John R. hose Publications......:..........eorge Iamilton Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kohacker James E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey obert Crawford Thomas Muir Harry B. Culver George Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford No-man Eliezer Lee Slaytn ames rioffer boseph Van Riper orris Johnson Robert Wiliamson Charles Kline William R. Worboys Rnsiness Secretary--Mary liase Laura Codling Alice McCiy Agnes 'Davis Slvia NI iller Bernice Glaser IIelen E.. nusselwhite ,ortense Gooding Eleanor4Wlkinshaw Dnorotliea Water man Night Editc--C. R. KAUFMAN SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1929 MORE PATERNALISM AND FLOOR-SPACE Harvard's $11,000,000 experiment i ence, or from simple prejudice. Thet Inlander has been our black sheep, we have laughed in its very face, and have thumbed our noses be- hind its back. However, the recent efforts of Mr. Courlander to cast aside by-gones and to start afresh with new in- spiration and new goal in mind' should attract our attention. We hope him the best of accomplish-, ment. It is certain that the in- definiteness of purpose of the past is a weakness. Probably the staff cannot start a critical journal to begin with, nor for some time es- tablish a definite critical outlook, but this should be its goal. The end will no doubt be accomplished un-I der the new organization of the! staff into special departments. The' fact that the staff will look at the Inlander as a magazine and notj merely as a reward for students who write good themes will in-I crease, we believe, the vitality of the organ. We are placing our pre- judices on the shelf, to wait for the long renowned for its fostering of instrumental tradition. Jeno Len- er, the leader, Joseph Smilovits, se- cond violin, and Sandor Roth, viola. were all pupils of the old master Hubay, while Imre Hartman, cell- ist, was a student of Popper. Lener was the child prodigy of Hubay's "master class". At eleven years of age, he was one of the first violins in the Budapest Grand Opera Or- chestra. All the other menbers were prize winners and proved their worth as solo artists. At the outbieak of the revolu- tion in Hungary and the period of communism in Budapest which be- 'gan in 1919, Lener and his three as- sociates in the Grand Opera Or- chestra with characteristic polit- ical indifference retired to a remote Hungarian village and devoted their energies to chamber music. Two years later they made their de- but in Vienna as an ensemble group before a distinguished international gathering. Their reputation was at once establishedtandgR - vi~cc aaan~ieu uu avel per-1 The necessity for a Congressional outcome. sonally invited them to Paris the act in this situation arises from following autumn. Their annual the fact that citations for contempt FLASHES tours to England have become an because of refusal to disclose infor-. FROM WEEK'S BQOKS important, feature of the musical mation, as in the case of the three season there. Washngtn unortnate beore News from the hub of literary Washington unfortunates before life, Fifth Avenue in New York, i This year marks their first visit the inquiry investigating Brook- ' to America. Whether from an in- hart's liquor charges, and of Harry states that the book about its wn tuitive grasp of the first principles life, Hudson River Bracketed,- by F.inclair, aie ered in ' pursu- Edith Wharton, is leading through- of publicity or merely from a nat- ance of a law reading "Every per-out the country as the best seller ural zest for a controversial life, son who having been summoned for the week. But Farewell to Jeno Lener has managed to usurp as witness by the authority of'. et as w sArms, which has topped the list much valuable space in the Metro- either House of Congress to give since its appearance two months politanp Sinc it apearnce wO ~nt3 9 anpro|ss and musical jour- testimony. . . . upon any matter 1 ago and which is now in some far nals with discussion of the work under inquiry before. . any corn- d i under inquir beou re - advanced edition, is playing a close and principles of his organization. mittee of either House. . re- second. The Dido of Gertrude Ath- With a frankness verging on bold- fuses to answer any pertinent ques-dB ness he has made public statements 1 tion under the inquiry shall be egto the effect that he n1 longer be- Ever La Forge are also in the run- eeetthtenoogrb- deemed guilty of a misdemeanor." ,a lieves that myth about chamber (U. S. Rev. Stat. sec. 102) In ad- ning. A stern sounding book, ( .S. Re . S a .s c 02 n a - 'Tw elve A gainst the G ods, by W , - m usic being strictly "l'art intim e." i n t h s s a u o y c n e p ,W l i m B lt o s a e d f r t e n n i t t m n u s P r o al dition to this statutory contempt, TwleAans'hos byWl Hi sttmn-us:Proal ' ham Bolitho, is ahead for the non- stae ntrn.PsnayI the Supreme Court has minimized, fiction books. do not feel that chamber music through its decision handed down should be restricted to the salon. in Sinclair's case, the chances for * * * If you want to study the construe- any appeal from the citation ins a During the past week, Bitter tion of the piece, to hear the piece lesser court upon recommendation Water, the novel which was award- as counterpoint and not as music, a of the inquiry held in contempt. ed the Gerhard Hauptmann prize small place is better, but if you are The immediate effect of Senator for 1928, has been circulated in an interested in the spirit of the mu- Capper's bill upon the journalism i English translation made by Cedar sic rather than the letter I cannot profession would be to elevate the 'and Eden Paul. This novel, writ- see that the size of the hall makes newspapermen to an equal status ten by Heinrich Hauser, was sold in any difference. Art is art in large with the time-honored occupa- Germany under the title of Brack- or small spaces. As a matter of tions. The relations between a wasser. The author is only twen- fact, some of our most successful correspondent and a powerful fig- ! ty-eight. He was born in Berlin London concerts have been in Royal ure in government and. industry are and served in the navy during the Albert Hall which seats about ten not a whit less vital than those war and after the German revolu- thousand." These remarks have rnrtr,4~rrr . rr r In small-unit education, to be in- between a lawyer and client, the augurated next fall with 522 Stu doctor and patient, husband and. dents in the new Dunster and Low-I wife, or priest and penitent. In ell houses, is holding the attention; fact, the immensity and ramifica-$ of those who think about educa- tions of contemporary administra- tional progress. The New York I tive offices demands that the re- times and the Christian Science! porter and official be on terms of Monitor have already viewed the candor and fair dealing. The i project favorably: they see desir- vIwriting ofanews containing whole; ability in splitting the huge masses' truths stated in their relative im- of students at our great universi- portance presupposes a vast and in- ties into more wieldy groups, at thez timate knowledge of their entirej same time retaining the skilled in- background. This information, us-! struction and superior facilities of ually acquired confidentially for a large institution. purposes of background for stories, To us it is not clear just wherein constitutes the reporter's stock in! lies the advantage of having the trade; it is not a professional se-. groups more wieldy, better organ- cret to be guarded, but rather a I ized. There will, perhaps, be more confidence to be specifically em- opportunity for the students to ployed. mingle with the faculty - to have - - the lamp of truth in the very midst NOT JUST SPECTACULAR, of their lives instead of only on Commander Richard E. Byrd has! the classroom fringe-for the so- flown over the South Pole, adding called "inner-college" plan provides another to his list of heroic deeds.j professors' rooms in the dormitor- Byrd has now conquered the North les. This may prove a valuable Pole, the Atlantic and the South stimulus to that class of students i Pole, any one of which tasks would inherently brilliant, but also lazy, ! bring him world renown. who would like to know some. pro- His achievements, spectacular ast fessors better if it weren't so much they are, have not been undertaken! bother to find them. in the spirit of adventure alone. It is probable, also, that well or- The search for scientific data has ganized groups under the direction been a prime motive in all his en- of an adviser-tutor will make the deavors. The South Pole flight administration more efficient in comes simply as the most spec- Imposing its ideas, its will, and its tacular incident of a two year geo- regulations on the student body. logical and geographical expedi- It seems to be a principle in the tion in the polar regions. minds of today's higher educators The world may take off its hats that they, as well as the secondary to those, in a spirit of recklessness, educators, should have an outfit of succeed in some hazardous task, but morals and a standard of behavior to Commander Byrd who accom- to impart rather rigidly to their plishes his unprecedented feats, charges. Regimenting the stu- i'through thorough preparation and dents into a routine of dormitory ! for the purpose of enhancing man's living and eating seems to be as knowledge, it should extend its sin- convenient a way as any of propa- cerest thanks. gating the doctrine of the straightt I~ tion followed the sea for another: year. Much of the atmosphere of this novel is reminiscent of, the years spent in Imperial service. The+ book has 'received the hearty re- commendation by Thomas Mann, recent winner of the Nobel prize for literature. Robert Bridges, the poet laure- lar-ate of England, now in his eighty-+ sixth year, is to publish sometime this month, "The Testament of; Beauty," a long philosophical poem.: , , * W. E. Woodward, the author of George Washington and Meet Gen- eral Granrt, is now at work on an- other birgranhv which is to by peculiar relevancy to their mid- western debut here Tuesday for the vasty, heaven-stretchy spaces Of our own auditorium will provide this confident organization with no meantest. On theireAnn Arbor concert they offer. the following program, an interesting one though one of the many Beethoven quar- tets that they have recorded for Columbia would have appealed more than the Schubert: Quartet in B Flat Major . . Mozart Quartet in G Minor, Opus 10 .Debussy Quartet in D Minor, Opus Posthumous........Schubert TEXAS GUINAN M - - ----V XT Oratorical AssociationPrah' A MERICA S * s VLONG GRE ATEST " 1f vL r i 0 I calll~l }.Jled, A Enem incn, th The contrast in subject matter called, An Enemy of Lindoln, the j of these. two announcements may Life of Thadeus Stephens, which is b etw pa n u e ns a to be published sometime in the bextoo ainful bt it appears that spring. The subject of this biog- Texas Guinan, the Queen of the raphy was one of the most mis- Night Clubs. and her gang of Hun- understood men of his generation dred Entertainers are coming to and during the dark days of the the Shubert-DetroitOperas ouse. closing period of, the Civil War and The show is advertised as "ideal the Reconstruction period after, he I entertainment to attend with your mae asmnyrteneid asftermn, friends" which doesn't sound very made promising to those many who have because of his implacable attitude towards the South and his opposi-been enjoying their secret desire to tion to the great Emancipator. Nev-sthis lusty Amaois"ationy ertheless, he was an astute and But proadway Nigts actualln honest stateman, a fearless andj does present a novel form of en- brilliant orator, and a sincereifn tertainment that was well-received violent politician, in New York by the most austere. The effort is made to turn the the- * * * atre into a Night Club with Texas Speaking of the reason why she meeting the eager audience at the has returned to writing the his- door, and participating with them torical novel, Gertrude Athei'ton in a grand frolic. says: "In the first place I should It is an elaborate production with never have written anything else a cast of 100 offering some thirty but historical novels had other sub- scenes, including a striking novelty jects occurred to me after I pub- of "The Mechanical Jazz Band.' a lished The Conqueror, but with the German mechanical effect present- exception of Rezanov, nothing did ed in America for the first time. until I wrote The Immortal Mar- * n * riage and The Jealous Gods rb o va- (OTHER DIETRIT SHOWSAJ' ACTOR- PRODUCER A'TTIRA 4cl'A OA ,, "I I" AOL i ti+ 11 DRAMATIC RECITAL and LECTURE Li rl