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December 04, 1929 - Image 4

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1929-12-04

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I

THE MICHICAN

-,,. ---s

VD1r , EC4. ;r

, _.. ... M.,.e

FublinWhe every morning except monday
during the Uriiiersit~ year by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.

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... ..._ _ ,.._.. , - ,. . ., .,g-.__ . . _ ..____. _- n ._. _ .___,-_._... __._... _ _.__. . ...
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f4

,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
au this paper and the local news published
berein.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate
of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-
master General.
Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.5a.I
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May.
uard Street.
Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 212!41
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR
ELLIS B. MERRY
Editorial Chairman ....... ... ierr C. Tille~y
City Editor................. Pierce Romenberg
News Editor ................ Donald J. Kline
Sports Editor......... Edward L. Warner, Jr.
Women's Editor......Marjorie Follmer
Telegraph JEditor......... Cassam A. Wilson
Music and Drama........ William J.. Gormian
Literary Editor ......Lawrence R. Klein
Assistant City Editor ....Robert J. Feldman
Editorial' Board ,
Night Editors
Frank E. Cooper- * Henry J. Merry
William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss
Charles R. Kaufman Walter WV. Wilds
Gurney Williams
Ex-officio 'Members
Ellis I1. M erry ..J, i ordan
Reporters
Bertram Askwith Dorothy Magee
Helen Bare I.ester May
Maxwell Bauer David M. Nichol
Mary L. ilehytner William Page
Benjamin 11. Berentsorf Iowvard 11. Peckham
Allan 11. Berkman htugh Pierce.
Arthur J. lBernisteini Victor R abinowitz
S. Beach Gonger Jobn D. Reindel
Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts
John H. blefiler jos;eph A. Russell
Helen.Domine "K" 'ioaeph Rnwitch
Margaret Eckels 1William P1. Salzarulo
Katharine Ferrin ('harles R. Siprawl
Carl S. Forsythe S. C7adwell Swanson
Sheldon C. Fullerton Jane : lmyer
Ruth Geddes M1arg;aret Thompson
Ginevra Ginn Ricbard L. 'Tobin
l ckt Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine
Ior ris Groverman Uarold n. Warren, Jr.
Ross Gustin Charles white
AMargdret Harris G. Lionel Willens
David It. Ilempctead john E Willoughby
JCullen Kennedy Ratban Wise
caseLl. akevy Barbaa Wihnt
Luselly, MarbarViva riit
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 21214
iBUSINESS MANAGER
A. J. JORJ)AN,* JR.

floors "some one says or does some-
thing he wouldn't say or do if he!M scA dD an
had not been drinking?" M0.-%, D -1
NEW LIFE. ;B N .BYTHlE LEVER STRING QUARTET.
Ater all of these years of inspir-'FIE N A Review by William J. Gorman.
ato n xiain(otythe. AND OTHERS? This youthful organization has
latter), the news that the Inlander' The B. and G. boys have retired j peculiarly vigorous and brilliant:
hasjus unergne cmplte e- ntother urrws or he intrattitude of approach to chamber!
hasjus unergne coplee r- int thir urrws or he intrmusic that makes for many excit-:i
organization is startling. Duringj and will probably be out next sprin 1ing moments. But there are annoy-
the past its structure has been for further disturbance of campus ing ones too. For often this vigour,
rather haphazard; it has only comej quietude. this fundamental concern for ex-
* * ploiting themselves as personali-
to life when some hardy soul, bray- te-o htsi l f d
er than his fellows, stepped' to the We can remember severer tesfrthtswhatthir ait-d
1 whelIt eem, 'oweertha theI yarsagowhe thy idusri_ looks like, an exhibitionistic feel-
whee. sees, owevr, hatthe ear agowhe the inustI ing-cones at odds with the music.
masts have never been strong ousty worked all night spread- Tersl hni rnl ipes
enough or the ship has been leaky, igyan n hesdeals n Thng ersl heboingfrnergysplea-
for it periodically goes to the bot-ig ehp oig o nry o
tom. hot sumimers evening to pre-] ing into self-display, out of har-
Mcoftefutitsolbe vent the students from using mony with the music, is not what
said, has lain with poor adm~*inistra- ; roller skates, the only legl awe iexpect o eir rmper formeim-a
tion and a lack of business abilityI means of tranisportation allow- anhe qnuoartet. n'amdima
rather than an insufficiency of ef-1 ed them.j I am not asking ror the emeni-
fort. A board cannot successfully **te n oieeso h i-lv
manage an organization where! But in the winter time, will the tipersoancoien-soo theankhd-v
quic andprecse ecisons ustspread the slightest bit of sand on1soebtiigfcatnduls.
be made, and one man cannot ob- the walks so that the lines of some sooomenutheFignifateandues
tain a large enough supply of ad- ten thousand students will not be have been satisfied with merely
vertising to pay for the publication, endangered? No, there's no ban Jta.I smrl htteLnr
Under the new system one man agaInst w,.lking. fundamental concern with expres-
will manage the Inlander and a * * * sing themselves doesn't always
business manager and staff will The Ann Arbor fire depart- yilhapreut.Tirmg-
handle the important task of se-!I ment held its aninual field day yiedthepporstsrchering u-
curing advertising. Each .editorial 1 celebration on Saturday last ift eforswhichstmrelyngaqphy-
deatetwilhv tsonha, when. they answered a call to a sical translation of their mental
and the work will be specialized as fire on State Street.,!approach-strikes me as an ex-
much as possible. ; *,ample o misapplied virtuosity. In'
All of this activity is indicative They battled for twenty minutes, this aog thsagressive brilliance and quest
of a healthy condition. however, reeling this way and that, swveat- for vigor and power, they have sac-'
the major factor in its success wil!ling, their lungs bursting f or air. rificed in nuance, finesse, and the
be its editorial policy, which has*** patrician qualities of the art. There
previously been at fault. "In the.
past it has been the tradition to But they finally got the hose i odnigtertecatpo
print the best of the material sub-! unwound, and ready to aim section of sonorities and harsh
gallns f wteruponthefrot jmasses. that thrill often. But thrills
mutted,"_ says the Inlander's new, galos iae uo h rn are not all-important. By concen-
statement of policy, "but this meth- porch. * *trtnonclradsoiyhe

SA r f ER7S
R~ainwear
4,' Xt.it I'S froa Brand Ii.ikrrsIt, ' tab.-
-ii.ireuIxsti , e,'C'ttioa mt the fndit
.berain aaroun'tw ,iof,!ood j)Crear ti as
neii as t.,', lifeare ~eCtit.!
at..sr -ii,-.rC rftCafll good-,, kint,I tt roomy.i'
:ar L' tf'i - I a tairuiI ,.,Ito keel, tttt
ah-.,t~."I teand H,,z~ it. a'!are to k~e had
listd ..rimliniwd. 1i 'it' "or riaspa as . 'tti
t~rir na .ridle a rict s ,ofas i},,-!forcaty
!turp.,-" rrs ieei'~os os"t.
H. M.SAWYE,-YEK-& SON
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Toasted
Sandwiches
Fountain Drinks
and Candies
We serve a special hot
noon- day Luncheon.,
Open 7:30

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Shop
Betore
Going
Home
The few extra pack-
ages mailed or carried
bomne will be more than
worth the hours you
would spend in congested
stores. In the mean time
your wiser friends will be
enjoying their vacation
and anticipating the ap-
proach of a merry Chris-
tmas.

THE BETSY ROSS
SHOP
13-1.5 Nickels Arcade
CORtNWEIJL COAL - COKFIj
Scranton, Pocahontas
Keitucky and West V irginia (XCoal
Solvay un G.a~s Colo.,
Tbis business has bees' gfowing ever
since it was established. The secret-.
"giving absolute satisfa.ction to on ir
cuistomners." Wfi believe it p ysx to do
biaess in a frie~ndly way. If you
think dm t~o. 14t t°'{e thcr,
CORN WELL GOAL - COKE.
OFFICE, CORN WELL BLOCK
Phones, Office 4M5l-4552 Yard Office: 55
READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS!

odt nas not succeeded in producing
a well-balanced publication. In thej
future we shall attempt to secure
I good writing by solicitation among
writers who have not previous~ly

Assitant ManagerI contributed, and in doing so will
ALEX K~. SCHERER I inject new life and interest. Pri-
marily, we wish to encourage good
Department Mana gers writing on the campus of which
advertising ...... ....Ho[llister NTahley ' there should be erlough to support
Advertising ............KasperfU. [Halverson
Advertising .............. Sherwonod A. Upton a critical-literary magazine. Fur-
Service................. ..George A. Spate
Circulation ................. I. V'ernor. iDavis thermore, we shall attempt to
Accounts ................... ... lohn IR. Rose I stimulate an interest in the unus-
Publications ..................:eorge HaIlto
______ ual. Above all, the Inlander will at-
Assistants I tempt to retain a, sense of humor."
Byrne. M. fladenoch Marvin Kobacker In order. to make the Inlander a
James E. Cartwright- Lawrence Lucey
Robert Crawford 'Nhomas Muir successful publication, this and
Barstry S. Culver G~eorge Patterson tmr sncsay e motn
Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford Nra mozrre latn121te iteceary.orMenouimp on
laes Iloffer loseph Van Riper intelerywodshudbs-
Norris Johnson Robert Williamson I licited for articles, and professors
Charles Kline 4tilliam R. orhioys swl ssuet nteicmu
Business Secretary-ilary (ha..e aswlastuesonhecm s
----- should be asked to contribute.
La'jra Codling Alice McCultly Then perhaps the Inlander would
Agnes Davis Sylvia Miller pbihsmtio fmr nvr
Bernice °Glaser Hielen E. Musselwhite pbihsoeigofmr nv-
Jiortense Gooding Eleanor Wtalkinshaw sal interest to the campus than
Dorothea Waterman 1
_______..____._____ -- --- the scribblings of a few undergrad -
Night Editor-GURNEY WILLIAMS uate literati., These latter scrib-
WEDNESDAY. DEC. 4, 1929 a blings appeal chiefly to their auth-
__________________________ i ors and to a small, esoteric group
that likes to trace minor literary
___________________________movements.
COLLEGE PATERNALISM SEEN ? 0

Unfortunately the fire was onI are evading the necessity for the
j the roof, so they valiantly climbed ,more subtle distinctions which the
up, ore ost f te shngle o? exigencies of the medium demand.
.1 ad pepaed o decen agin. In interview tonight, Mr. Lener
andpreare todesendagan, admitted, significantly enough I
* * * ' think, that their favorite music l
Their true object was to( was Beethoven. It is understand-
make a hole in the top for the; able. Ill performance of the early
fire to come out of. There theyj and middle Beethoven quartets.
would catch it unawares and 1 their manner of approach should
extinguish it. be in 'harmony with Beethoven's
* * * aggressive assertion of the will to

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The flames refused to obey the; live 41 :ace or all obstacles, r'eal
coaxings and laws of the local fire- and imagined. Though they dis-
battlers, so they proceded to break tinctly modified their approach in
a few windows, to give the fire al the {Mozart, I think it was still a
good blast of air to send it up to ~ case of misapplication-of a guar-
th'e roof. . tet attempting to transcend the
* *# physical limits assigned by their
They must have missed some; personalities to their perceptivi-
Swindows, or doors, since thei ties. M~ozart never makes the mis-
fire went out in. spite of their1 take of thrusting subjects for re-
efforts. flection or pictures of conflicts stir-
* * * ring our primitive yearnings for
And the worthy book editor an- the battle on ears seeking the sat-
nounces that the "Inlander" is a isfaction of sound only. That is
problem. That's no news. However:i his great virtue-his purity. A pe-
be announces "revolutionary plans" I culiarily passive fineness and a con-
for it. We hope they don't turn itJ tented sensibility is essential to the'
into a Wild West story magazine, full projection and full realiza.tion
or Aviation stories or a True-par-I of the refinement of his spirit-a
don us. we didn't mean to mention ! refinement revealing itself in ethe-

I

Many

Helpful

Suggestions

May be found
Right in this Paper

I

IF IvS DONE cWITH HfEAT, 10 I) CN0DOIT BETci~i WITH %CAS

BIILLIONS OF CUBIC FEIET

28..

OBJECTIVELY - '-I that.
The New York Evening Post in a Editorial C mmI
recent editorial finds the "imma-; After reviewing the 'opera is-
turity of the American university PATERNALISM worinone arglet,wenaru-
graduate, as compared with the wrigo irto au
product of Oxford and Cambridge, (The Yale Daily News) script, or what have you, for
a never-ending source of surprise." 3ThZ rather sharp consideration next year's opera. It will be
It also finds that present "tenden- which the New York Evening Post!' published in this column short-
cies are to make him younger and ;give s the recent ruling of the 0o1-
stil moe yungin harcte aslege faculty by which men on scho-**
wellas ducaion" Sch a exres lastic probation are to be ineligible' The Daily needs a itew staff of
lion coming from a source well re- foi election to fraternities raises movie reviewers. There is no, doubt
,moed romthecoutrys cmpu- !teagi the time-old question of pa-I about it. They give every show a
esandfromep cuntigys bcmpus-ternalisme and its place in Am te-I good writeup. As for us, we stand,
es, andllrepresentingdanoobjective
Consideration of the contemporary a olgs h dtro h as ever, for no taxation .without
tha jstPost views this latest edict as onereesnai.
collee grduat, ismoreof many tendencies which are mak- a
Interesting, To The Daily, which ing our undergraduate "'young in
has been holding the same view, it; character as well as education." Our review of the week's
is thrilling; and to the forces of Ofcusemihraete shows would have been:
militant paternalism it should be Jlin.question a owa h rmr "Sweetie," sticky, rather inane,
jotnaim of ast college is, biu we are sup-ar and sugary; "Ont Trial," gril-
Students who are handed the)psdt esln ntefc f ling, questioning, and too much}
tarred tbeslnintefcof tlig SyIWihSn,"ed of the paternalistic the assertion that "every one knows takn;"yItWhSog,
stick may be blinded by their pre-I that many of the most valuable too much Jolson., loud, and
jiidices to the real trend of univer- ;members of all fraternities have quite wet.
sity policies. The presidents and I been and are those with the worst ,**
deans, on the other hand, have the' marks." This somewhat irregular ; There it is all summed up in a
student body too immediately at 1 justification, if it may even be call-pagrhte oveorknw
had o ude t bjctvey,>ad ed that, of the presence of stow-' wh.at he's g'oing tose :at saves
are liable to error in their estimate aw yjncleefo-sca es n
of how much rope it should be giv-Iiincaveothexntowih space and time. And then yoca
en. With both the interested p- w onoeajodiinwhc hs:dd: John )loan. of the Annl Arborj
rents too near the trouble to see brought down heaps of criticism on !-as a nonc6ta ewl
it dispassoinately, a criticism from ;the American college today. The not tolerate any more mediocre
the outside-especially such a mat- #cag may well be true, yti osvueil nhstete.Adi'
charget oesabout time.
ter-of-fact, worldly criticism as a not eliminate the validity of .Dean.
metropolitan 'newspaper office has1 Mendell's statement that "the
provided-should have extraordi- election of a man on low stand- ; Anno fhwolgiep
nary validity, and should be given ; warning prevents the election off showing mediocre pictures, i-
more than passing thought. some other man who has done his stl etr iahn a
The immediate occasion for the ! job well instead of slighting the chine, get some better features,
Evening Post's outburst is a new i main objective of his college. add a few good comedies, he
regulation at Yale prohibiting stu- course." Still greater departure Would really have a fairly de-
dents who have received scholar- from the realm of logic may be cent theatre. Yes, the news
ship warnings from joining frater- noted when the Post asserts that~ reels are reeling too.
nities. This is editorially charac- "such a ruling may be all right **
terized as a "new nursery practice," when applied to members of athle- This is the beginning of Joy
and the suggestion is advanced j tic teams because in that capacity Month in theatres. The managers
that Dean Mendell might learn in the boy represents his university are- the only ones who get any joy.
Yale's new Institute of Human Re- and also because it goes to show There's one born every minute, soI
lations that "there is a better way i that he is a bona fide undergradu-
to treat. boys on the edge of man- 1 ate instead of a professional ah- why should they worry? They haveE

real delicacy of expression and a
subtle vein of poetry and idealism;
that too many dismiss with the
phrase, "pretty" or "sweet." M1o-
zart certainly shouldn't be enlarged
and brilliantised with sonority;
these sculptured melodies don't
want or need color or power. And
with the exception of the Adagio-
which was good, though not pro-
found--the Lener Quartet erred
here, I think,.fe h Mzr a
EverythingafethMortws
anti-climax. From Debussy, the
epicuran of sight, scent, and sound,
we got many sounds and types of
sounds for the money; but a color-
;ist should stick to the orchestra.
Schubert left us dreaming of
grandmother's bridal veil - many
interesting rosebud patterns, pleas -
ing enough, but boring after the
first twenty yards, the Maiden
theme, for example, becoming in
our minds definitely old maidish by
the end of the slow movement.
BROADWAY NJ('HTS"
S A Rteview by ChaA-'s Monroe.
IWe greeted all our fiends this
'I morning with outstretched arms,
Shollering "Hi, there, oh boy-old boy.!
{Howzit go? Yer lookin' swell. How's
the folks? Give the folks a. big hand.
IGive 'em a big hand. Step right up
and mitt me!-'Ats right! Whoo-
pee." Texas Guinan affects one
that. way and seeing her on the
sttige for two hour; iktt n~i-lit ri- y
lose us our following.
The show gives you the im~pres-
sion of being a. hazy collection of
one or' two good acts, Texas Guin-
:an, and some very mediocre talent.
Three of the best skits have been
lifted from Murray Anderson's Al-
F manac. Some of the humor is clean.
Among the features of the show
were: (1) Ai iss Guinan's use of
cosmetics-she had a different
, color for each face-lift level; 12)
Jans and Whalen, who save the

150
100
75
50
25

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Votle that theaetca I t illune hli e ,,rea.sed nor e i t 0,i'T" r oreGeti s neded . obet i bttr
-Each yeai' -d h iIG ka
"wins i. pop I #ssularity

IA CK in 1921, seventy-odd bl-
-~lions of cubic feet of' manuface-
tured gas met Industry's needs.
Those were the days when. Industry
was just learning "~if it's done with
heat, you can do it better- with gas."
Last year Industry used a hundred
and forty-seven billion cubic feet.
Something more than douible 1921's
record!
This gain wasn't philanthropy. In-
dfustry is hard boiled. Gas heat
produces'
Today there are innume~rable uses for
g"as heat in industry. F'rom bread-bak-

ing to 1heat-treatinog steel: from glass-
Mlving to pottery firingy. And newv
uses are Ibeing developed every day.,
Gas heat is economical; profitable.
It is flexile; capable of accurate
contr'ol andl accttrate regulationi.
Above all, it is dependable, not sub-
ject to break-down or interruptions-
Whatever the heating problem,
gas heat gives the most for ev'ery
filel dollar.
There is a book, "Industr'ial Gas
Heat," which tells about gas in In-
(lustrv. You will find it interesting
and instructive. A postal card brings
it. Address

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