a .x. ,:..K a . f 1-1 r, M.1 C.H I C., -AN ji-) A I Y'P' iS'C7' ' i'd's a: ? ii t1 E_ =, i :" rt S a x a MrTaviA - "x;. x x. r - .a 7 v4x. '-'W 4tx-*. 4. *L *1Vf t .. 131 Y . - - - - - - - - - - - - . .--..--- - --.--.--------____ - fit, l- t.i.:t :iG r[;r :;. i :: ) ._._. ; Published every morning eX &pt Monday &uring the University 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 postoffice at Ann Arbor, Micigan, as second class matter. Special rate of, postage granted by Third Assistant Post- waster General. Subscription by carrier, $400; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor'Prese Building, May- 6ad Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman..........Geor C. Tilley City Editor..... ...........Pierce Rseneg News Editor..............Donald JKline Sports Editor....:..Edward L. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor. .E Marjorie Folmer Teleraph Editor.........Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama....... William J. Gorman Literary Editor ........ Lawrence R. Klein 4ssistant City Editor. .Roert J. Feldman Editorial Board Night Editors Frank E. Cooper . Henry J. Merry Wil m C. Gentry Rohert L. Sloss Chares R. Raufman Walter W. Wilds .ourey Willams Ex-officio Members Ellis R. Mery A .1Jordan Reporters fertram Askwith Dorothy Magee Heen Barc Lester May Maxwell Iauer David M. Nichol Mary L. Behymer William Page Benjamin I Berentsorlioward 11. Peckham Allan H. Berkman llugh Pierce Arthur ,1. Bernsein Victor Rabinowitz S. Beach Cnger John D. Reindel Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts John H. Dener Joseph A. Russell lelen Domine Joeph Rwith Margaret Ekels William P. Salzarulo )'atharine Ferrin Charles R. Sprwl Carl S. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton Jane :payer Ruth Geddes "" argaret Thompson Ginevra Ginn ' ihard L. Toin Jack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine orris Groverman I arld 0. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret Barris G. Lionel Willens David e. Hfenpstead loI E Willoughby S.Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise cap Levy Barbara Wright Sassell E. MScCracken Vivian Zimit BUSINESS STAFF Teiephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising.............T. 11olliter Mabley Advertising ............Kasper It. Halverson Advertising........ ... Sherwood A. Upton Service ...... ......... ...Ceore A. Spater Circulation.................I.ernor avis accounts...................John R. Rose Publications ................George lamilton Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker ames E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey iRobert Crawford Thomas Muir Harry B. Culver Geoge Patterson $ Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanfordi Norman Eliezer L ee Slay to1 aznes Hoffer Joseph Van Riper Norris Johnson Roert Wiliamson Chales Klne Xbrlioi PR Vrhoy Business Secretary-Mary Chase Laura Codling Aie MrCiiI' Agnes Davis Svia Miller" j Bernice Glaser Helen E. Muselwhte Hortense Gooding fleaor \alkinshaw D orothea XWaterman Night Editor-FRANK E. COOPER THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1929 A VALUABLE THREAT. E Although the charges brought against Iowa in regard to paying athletes are of the most serious na- ture, the threat of expulsion has already gone far toward accomp- extraordinarily brazen and vi- cious. k If. however, in the light of thej facts as they are best known to itself, the committee resolves tof make Iowa's ejection complete and permanent, we fail to see how it can under the bright aegis of ama- teurism fail to prosecute a vigor- ous investigation of Northwestern, Wisconsin, Purdue, Indiana, Mm- nesota, Ohio, and Michigan. In4 the name of justice Iowa's ejection and such an investigation are in- separable. Yet we are certain that here, as on most of the other cam-j T?3SED ROL FRESH 'TONIGHT: Stauley Fletcher, Jul- ROLLS THIS liard pupil of Guy Maiei, appearsE MORNING I in piano recital in the School of Lark is really gone. After resign- ! Musib auditorium I e v i n n i n g ing eight times, quitting on nine- 1 promptly at 8:15. ty-eight different occasions, and l E. H. Sothern, famwus actor-au- refusing to write the column on thor, lectures in 1i1 Auditorium on rainy days days during which "Great Actors and Atirresses." there was more than 75 per cent At the Mendelssobit Theatre the sun, and, lately, any day that be- British film success 'Widdecombe gan with a sunrise and ended with Fair," a Cinema verson of the no -. a sunset, he at last impressed upon el by Eden Philpotts. Music And Drama o ., # .''" Read The Daiily Class ifeds Christmas Presents JA MES FOSTER ANN ARBOR, MICAIk;AN f 1 See the Classified Section I puses, nothing incriminating woul! ld the mind of everybody around here bft h ni__ be found; that the investigation hat he was not going to write Rolls would be not only a waste of time a me besenot onot KREUTZBERG AND GEORGI AT but a needless strain on the heal- any more, believe it or not. MENDELSSOMN. I thV On"CliflA n in iirlhinl-i srrn kn1-- * * * V~J wAILAUwIU m WIILJI We ucueve tai orinionin nienwe ~enee ;m wupplementin ),the Dol ey Uf athletics to be. To The Daily it Well, he's entitled to it. Three hringing some cf the best foreign seemsthat the present plight of semesters and a summer school films otherwis. unavailabie for Ann Iowa-that of having to knock at of keeping the public amused Aloor audiences, the Mendelssohn the door of the Conference for re- is no mean task. "Ask Harold theatre plans to :ring to Ann Ar- admission - has been warning Lloyd or Reginald Denny," says I hr shortly after Christmas H-arolu enough to all member universities Lark, looking over our shoul- Kreutzberg and Yvonne Georgi, that the committee will not toler- der. "They'll tell you-Give me sensational expressionisti dancers ate, and can, prosecute violations lots of publicity; I love it. And of the modern German school, now of amateurism. you may quote me." O. K. on their second American tonr. * * * Many have bemoaned the fact that SMOOTHING THE VAGARIES OF Anyhow, the department has exponents, good or bad, of the in- BUSINESS. been thoroughly overhau d and creasingly important and popular President Hoover's meetings of given a coat of paint and is now art of the dance have never found .d a mready for business as usual, except their way to Ann Arbor. In d2sper- . that it will be more usual than us- ation, some have tried to suggest leaders seems, at superficial glance, ual from now on. that Choral Union replace Ihe for- to possess sound enough economic ** mal opera in the May Festival merit. Political economists long Its contents will be composed with a performance of a modern have urged that one method of ta- of odd sights ,extraordinary allet. But thc I daresay will not pering off the vagaries of the busi- events, dire calamites,, floating rhaterialize for some years to come. ness cycle is by manipulation of rumors, bits of dirt, and unusu- So that Miss Loomis's, announce- governmental building in public al facts found, seen, felt, and ment that she has been able to se- works so as to cause extensive otherwise gathered on or obout cure Kreutzberg and his partner building in times of depression, and the campus. Yvonne Georgi should find an ap- vice versa. In the present case,:* v* proving response from the many however, the agencies of govern- on the campus who are anxious to ment are devoted to amassing and According to yesterdays Daily a get a well-rounded view of all the na Rhodes scholarship candidate must arts of the theatre. directing the private industrial in- i b rmafml hc eie nat terests of the nation in the line to-IMichigan he must be a Michigan It is fortunate, too, that the in- ward artificial stimulus of indivi- Mchgan t beamthan roduction to Ann Arbor of the dance dual enterprises. collee t, ad he mutave should .be with perhaps the fore- completed two years of attendance ms rit tpeeti h on So much for the superficial at a Michigan institution-and not most artists at present i the coun- phases. Upon deeper penetration, if Eloise either. try. Kreutzberg and Georgi are the we may make the suggestion with- * * most talented representatives of out being impugned as overly skep- Some contest rules-and this the German School under Mary tical, it would appear that the really has no connection with Wigman, which has attempted ihe jtraly asnoconecio wth founding of an individual style, recent financial and industrial the above--seem to try to dis- fudn fa niiulsye conferences were only slightly! cre candidtes as mry s based on a conception of the dance, more thanagents in the perpetra- sba vaguely linked up with the German moeta aet ,i h epta possible. We're reminded of a expressionist movement tn the tion of the "prosperity" bug-a-bear contest held in Ypsilanti once oxpr arts tmbemw t in- other arts. Kreutzberg was first in- which is perennially obsessing Re- by a theatre manager named troduced to American audiences by publicanism. MacIntyre. The oldetten-.A. 3--- N~ew York Listed Stocky Private Wire Contlectiol withI all Markets Sect rit es bought ot sold ton Telephone 225, 1 Brown-Cress & C Incorporated Investment Securities First Floor Ann Arbor Trust BI( DO YOUR GLASSES REMAIN F UL L _ Have you ever noticed that your guests lea e e water glasses full at the end of the meal? Do you supotE they do not like water or is it the taste of ie > iic drink you are serving. Play safe-obtain complete admai- istration from your friends by serving pure Arbor Sprifnl,; water. ARBOR SPRINGS WATER CO. 416 W. Huron Ph $_ MERRILL, LYNCH & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange Chicago Stock Exchange 0. Cleveland Stock Exchange , Detroit Stock Exchange New York Curb Market dg. Accounts Carried on Conservative Margin d201 First Nat'l Bank Phone 42.'' A tE '_ #Illll l#11l 1IIiI I# I#l## I# II I#11##11 ###I I#M## 1#111# C#1#####I#1 1##1#I111111111II1 1lit 11 11 111,IIW~~l: fill 111111 111li##llil #####111#1# #1##1#11j# 'CAUI MUZI() P'-rnmildonna soprantto CHORAL UNION SERIES Hill Auditorium TUESDAY, DEC 10 8:15 P. M. DISTINGUISHED ALIKE IN BOTI'H OPERA AND CONCERT A limited number of season tickets a vailable at $6.00, $8.00, $10.00 $12.00. Single tickets $1.50, $2.00 sY .af$2.50. -On sale at School of M usic, tI # 111 Ii# 111 1111 11111111111 aynard1s1reet. :tl#111##1 1111#E##! #11111I#1 111##1#CI Ililll111 litlll#11 II#1#II11 #1#i |til# 111#i##I# #II#I1##I 1##1##IM# 1##1##### #1#11#### lt#I1##1# 11##11!11 114131#1 /i Max Reinhardt in the spectacular At any rate, as has been al- dant at a certain movie was to production of "Midsummer Night's ready pointed out, it would be a get five free passes provided- Dream." Returning to Gerimnany, mistake if the return to normal = he launched hid career as s'artncm' conditions after the market crash I' He was accompanied by his to Yvonne Georgi with whom he and its consequent effect upon parents. 'had become formerly associated in non-speculative business should * * the Handver and Berlin Operas. be accelerated in any way by over- AN OBSERVER REPORTS. They worked up more than a huii- emphasis on coming booms or any Dear Jae. dred routines in readiness for their other means of whooping it up over Two mighty B. M. . C's are debut in this country last season. tsperaithNoralcavdepend anu- now battling 'for the vacant stu- They .captivated and electrified dent council job- and one of them critics and audiences who viewed the ability of the country and its seems to be having a bit of diffi- their extraordinary art. Jusst last people to isustai itself and pro- culty due to the fact that he was Sunday they received a brilliant vide all citizens with a highly pros- recently shown the door for bolt- review from John Martin of the perous material existence. The eti ngsNew York Times. They stop here on achievement of this normalcy, the How come? If a Student council ther transcontinental tour Jan. 9 fore-runner of prosperity, depends? and 10 with a proram made u member learns the good old axiom, and h10 waprora defupm upon allowing natural economic "Clean Politics during the first t new tendencies to produce their own re- two or three meetings there the favorites of last year's New sults, without either interference shouldn't be any need of going York programs. with individual initiative or over- again. That's all we hear from the emphasizing the nebulous ear- gaustere body; what else do they do?o .a fnm ini hatdyou've o that dA PR i 1 i r R ' fisin is prpse, Nt nl ha MMSUt ropeitytoma ni! Now that, you've thought_ that PLAY PRODUCTION. the average man's confidence in over, I have something else 'on my Play Production is working hard Iowa, undertaken a thorough the face of threateming instability. ; t aesmtig leo y Pa rduto swrighr aftmind. By the new classification on the Sir James Barrie's wistful hdusecleaning, but other Big Ten D CRTmethod we are told that the "Reg- drama, "A kiss for Cinderella " in schools (more or less subtly, it F Uistrar Rush" of the past will be-I which play the Michigan League should be said) have started theI In order to lessen the breach come a thing of the past. From will present them the first four vacuum cleaner. -which generally occurs between now on it will be a fight betwen days of the week of the sixteenth. Iowa bases her plea for rein- high school and colleges, principals fellow classmates rather. than in- Play Production is going to receive statement on the fact that the ath- from more than 30 schools through- terclass rivalry for the post posi- the co-operation of the dancing letic administration and,organiza- out the state are in Ann Arbor to- tions in line. Instead of intramural, class recently formed under the di- Ion, against which the charges were day conferring with members of the second semester classification rection of Miss Phyliss Adams of made last May, are no more; in the freshman class. By this method will be interclassical, or maybe just, the Physical Education department. their place are a new athletic of seeking information, it is felt classical. That's what it has been. The costumes are also being built board of control, a new facultyththepicalcnobinmr that the principals can obtain more If you signed up for all your especially for the occasion; so that representative on the Conference precise data concerning the needs classes with nothing more than a! the production, in spite of its not committee, and a new director of of graduates of their schools dur- broken nose as a result, you just being strictly one of Play Produc- athletics, including men who are ing the first year in college weren't properly classified, that's tion's public appearances, will be considered responsible and who This plan was originated two all. in elaborateness one of the fea- will curb any tendencies towards years ago when administrative offi- -TOBY. tures of the year. Thel Michigan subsidization or other practices not cers of the University found that * * ' League is presenting the play and strictly on the up and up. most high school graduates were Thank you, Toby. But don't is offering the four performances These strigent measures are ab- not well enough prepared to meet you know that the Health Ser- gratis to the public. solutely essential toward construct- the problems which are bound to vice can't get along unless a ---o-- ing any case at all for Iowa when confront them in college. Both stu- man staggers in for treatment PIANO RECITAL. the matter is thrashed out in the dents and principals greeted the once in a while? Stanley Fletcher,i a talented pi- faculty committee. plan with enthusiasm: the former, * * * ano student at the School of Music, The thoroughness of this house- on the ground that it kept them in Speaking of the Health Service, will give a recital tonight at 8:15 cleaning which Iowa has under- i the latter that they could observe what happened to the mumps? o'clock in School of Music Auditor- taken in order to present a plaus- contact with their high schools and Things were pointing to a swell j ium. ible case for reinstatement is mark- the results of their secondary epidemic and nothing happened. Mr. Fletcher has apperared on edly encouraging. It shows ei- training and determine the course And where is thpv,,,im] fl,,flnlilmanocains in the east, in re~ is * han ii U ~jimaycasnsnthpatna l i demcW111G1.S a~a~atuai tu epi- ccy of the mandates of the com- for future training. demic? Somebody is faling down mittee in control of Big Ten ath- The chief problem to be faced by on the job. letics. It demonstrates that they the University with entering fresh- *ka * very definitely hold the upper hand men is that of effecting as smooth SECOND PRECINCT HEARD in the matter of athletic profession- a transition as possible from their FROM. alism, and that they can and will I high school days. In this process of Dear Joe: move drastically to maintain the orientation the University cannot After three months of getting amateur status of all Big Ten uni- in reason become more and more acquainted, the Frosh finally got yersity athletes. high-schoolish. Rather must the together and had their election. Iowa has by no means been the high schools co-operate in trying to There's nothing like having the only Conference university whose prepare their graduates for what poor devils know all the ins and enthusiasm for good teams has they will encounter on college cam- outs of campus political dickering clouded its scruples in building puses To this end conferences be- before the initial dip. Such teams. It is rumored that two tween freshmen and their former -Mac. other schools are at the present high school principals seem a su- . * time liable to suspension for illegal perbly logical and fruitful way of It has been called to our atten- 3publicway and is recognized as an - outstanding young artist. He Is an' English youth who cane to this country a few years ago, and set- tied in Springfield, Mass. Because of his exceptional pian- istic ability he was called to the at- tention of Guy Maier of the piano faculty of the School of Music who a was so impressed with his musical resources, that he encouraged him to continue. Since that.time he has been a pupil of Mr. Maier's com- ing to Ann Arbor through the in- fluence of the Juilliard Musical Foundation who has provided him i