TH~MT~CAN i~Ait Z.-iTVIRDAY, DC11-M 7, i1;2t; Published every morning except Monday , 4uring 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- Vatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. 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, $4.50. QfrSees Ann Arbor Press Building, May. ward Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. have been affixed to the petition soon to be circulated, the campus OASTE R LL can be said to have proved to the Board of Directors that their inter- I est in the question is sufficiently ARE YOU sincere to warrant allowing an- GOING TO other vote to be taken which will THE BRAWL? not turn out to be a farce. We received a Play Production invitatidn yesterday to attend the IN RE CLASSIFICATION. showing of "A Kiss for Cinderella" and we were in such a hurry tha The registrar's office did not pre- 1 we barely glanced at the first few sent its usual deserted appearance lines which read: yesterday, but neither was it a The University of Michigan League scene of the rush and confusion and which in recent years has been characteristic of second semester cordially invite you to their joint EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY, E1- -- 21 1ii~-li iiiiiiillill fil i ill 1i llllllllllfillill l i lill l illii liiiliiii iiiiiiiiiiiliiiii itt1t i1 11ti~ llf11 Music And Drama - inlu a al oll11mimilm TONIGHT: Last showing in theCLAUDIA MUZ Lydia Mendelssohn theatre begin- ning at 8:15 of "Willecombe Fair," rima donnasoprano the British film success, being a e cinema version of the novel by " Edna Philpotts. CHORAL UNION SERIES CLAUDIA MUZIO. -HillAuditorium Heredity and environment have'= both played prominent roles in TUESDAY, DEC. 10, 8:15 P. M. bringing operatic fame to Claudia=W . Muzio, the distinguished Italian soprano, who will be heard in the = ..D TS I O t Choral Union series next Tuesday. T e She can lay claim to that glamor- OPERA AND CONCERT . ' ous thing--a complete life on the e stage. She has actually lived on the ;. - stage since babyhood. She was - A limited number of season tickets born in Italy but at the age of two her parents took her to London$2 _ $~12.00..Single tickets $1.50, $2.00, where her father became stage Single 1 es h r manager at Covent Garden theatre. $2.50. On sale at School of Music, e Here she listened to the great sing- Maynard street. ers, in rehearsal and performance.; ; 1A few years later her father came 11 111lllil ii i ti iiiifliiilili registration.' * * Editorial Chairman ..........George C. Tilley City Editor .................Pierce Rosenberg News Editor................Donald J. Kline Sports Editor.........Edward L. Warner, Jr.; Women's Editor..........Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editor......... Cassam A. Wilson Muskc and Drama........ William J. Gorman Literary Editor... .Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor ....Robert. J. Feldman Editorialt Board Night Editors PrankE. Cooper Henry . Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kaufman Walter W. Wilds Guarney Williams Ex-officio Members Ellis T. Merry A J. Jordan Reporters Bertram. Askwith Dorothy Magee Helen ;Bare Lester May Maxwell Baer David M. Nichol Mary L. Ielymer William Page Ienlamin 1f.P erentsotlloward H. Peckham Allan H Berkman augh Pierce Arthur J. Bernstei Victor Rabinowitz S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Thomas iM. Cooley Jeannie Roberts John H. Denier Joseph A. Rnssell Helen Domiine 'Joseph Rnwitch Margaret Eckels5 William P. Salzarnlo Katharine Ferrin Chbarles R. Sprowl Carl S. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton Jane Thayer Ruth Geddes Margaret Thompson Ginevra Gin'ichard L Tohin Jack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine Morris Groverman Harold 0. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret Harris G. Lionel Willens Tavid B. -Temn-tead John E. Willoughby L Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise Jean Levj Barbara Wright Russell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers advertising......-T. llollister Mabley Advertising-............asper1I alverson AdvertisJng.............SherWood .. Upton Servic ........ ........George A. S pater Circulaon ... ... .... ....I ernor Davis Students moved easily about If that's the way they feel abou (there was room to move about) the thing we imagine it ought to b and quickly signed up for the quite an affair. But wait - ol courses they had elected. There' pshaw, we didn't read far enough i It's "joint offering." Some of thes Semed have beome aota te-pI announcements are a bit confusing dich hn a becme almost a tra- !We thought they had simply for dition of classification, gotten the period after the joint. Early classification, as a means, of removing the get-in-what-class you-can-attitude which harried The astonishing frankness of ou students often assumed under the advertisers is something to writ old system, is one of thesE thing. home about. The Oratorical asso which are well arranged largely eiation took a lot of space on th through their very simplicity. When last page of Thursday's Daily t they are put into effect, one won- tell of Mr. Sothern's appearanc ders why no one thought of them ,but they candidly added that th before. recital would be "interspersed wit The advantages of being able to antedote and story . . . ' consult advisers at their own lei- * * * sure and the student's, of being Well, we heard the lecture able to plan the next semester's and it wasn't so poisonous. work before the rush of finial ex- aminations, of avoiding waste of time waiting in -line-all advan- WORD FROM ONE OF OUR J ,r to New York where he held a sini- e j lar position with the Metropolitan h Opera Company; and again a life of music was continued for the I small Claudia. She played on the stage among the properties and became a favorite with the great singers during the rehearsal pe- riods. She tells today of how sh Vii." ^ty - :.; f ..JJ_ ~ ,., r ' - E t 1 r' tages concomitant to the early1 classification idea-are too evident to require exposition,. Credit for the installation of the system goes to the smiling gentle- man who is constantly coming out from his private office to the coun- ter in the registrar's public office, to see how the system is working. Prof. D. L. Rich, of the department of physics and director of classifi- cation, deserves our commenda- tion. -o n z ctr a zr-H Acgounts..........John R. JRose 'V, IEIW1;A JI1. PubtYlications........George Hamilton Columbia whose unique psychol- Assistants ogy department recently discover- rne M. Ba noch Marvin Kobacker ed that brunettes are actually and Robert Crawford Thomas Muir scientifically hotter than blondes, Harry ,B. Culver George Patterson Thomas . Davis Charles Sanford has just undertaken another bit of Norman Eliezer L ee -Slayton laoe offer eeseph Van Riper highly practical research. Students' fmes Hoffer Is 9 NJorris Johnson "obert Williamson i will be paid one dollar an hour to Charles Kline wvill;,im R. Worboyi Business Secretaryr--:r bChase ?drink coffee in order that its ef- fects on personality and conscious- Laura Codling Alic M illy ness may be accurately mapped Agnes Dais ylva filler*mpe lernice Glaser llelen E. Musselwhite under controlled conditions. Hortense Gooding Eleanor Walkinshaw porothea Waterman I The experiment nas been care- NIGHT EDITOR-HENRY MERRY fully planned. The subjects have ----- filled out three-page questionnaries SATJRDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1929 with regard to their rheumatism, interest in classical poetry, sales- manship, fainting spells, fondness for dancing, popularity at parties, SPONTANEOUS ACTION. diary complexes, and physical ce- pacity for drinking coffee. Realizing that conditions at the The result should be of the ut- SLUETHS. used to stand before her mirror Dear Joe: pretending that she was one of the I know that Mr. Sothern - or Northern (He is called "The Great" great singers and imitating the something, and the Great North- acting of the prima donnas. ern is my favorite railroad) -- is With remarkable tact for a stage; eccentric. He carries along with manager, Mr. Muzio refused to let him a French valet which answers his daughter take singing lessons. to the name of Hubert, a creature He realized that she had a marvel- ; of tender sensibilities who was I simy panic - stricken at the ous voice but was rightfully afraid thought of living amongst college of spoiling it by pre-mature de- students for a day. velopment. Instead, he satisfied Mr. Sothern ordered a suite of 1 her musical yearnings by placing rooms at the Lawyer's club for:hsi himself and got another one for a Hubert-away from all the noise of musical expression. Through her; and traffic of Ann Arbor--and then j father's guidance, however, she 1 requested several stage properties was taught to observe all the de- that taxed the ingenuity of the tails of stage setting and perform-3 Oratorical management. The chair ance of opera music. When she was that the great actor sat in was by n courtesy of the Women's League, fifteen, spe was se familiar with the the cushions he sat on were by great operas that she virtually courtesy of President Ruthven, and could have produced any one of the three hour disseration was by them from her notebook. These - courtesy of the audience which, at about 11 o'clock, began to fidget notes, taken by an eager little girl,' something fierce. {are the most cherished treasures When I first saw that table cov- in her library today. er-I don't know where it came When she was sixteen her father from, but it was a gorgeous affair and mother took her back to Italy. -I thought that at least Mr. Soth- And then she began to sing. Shei ern was going to extract large ;studied in Turin and Milan. Her bowls of goldfish from underneath progress was rapid and after a; it, or perhaps take rabbits from a relatively short period of study she hat. Didn't you? I wish he had. made her operatic debut in Milan j .-Bobo. and later sang in Covent Garden' * * * where as a child she had crept Aw, you don't appreciate great about the stage floor. Her sensa-' art, Bobo. tional successes on these stages * * * led to her Metropolitan engage- (Sure; I wish he had, too.) ment. She made her American de- but in New York in 1916 as Tosca. *It is reported that her father stood THE FIRE COMPANY AGAIN. in the wings "Looking like an It- Dear Joe: alian brigand about to } weep." Anent the remarks several days Weeping with joy, of course. Fort- back concerning the local fire de- Claudia was immediately proclaim- partment, do you - remember the ed by the critics as "the greatest two alarm affair of last year when Tosca .since Ternina." Since thenj a hero knocked the glass out of a she has been associated with prac- window in th floor above the Par- iftically all the great operas of theI rot; and then lifted the sash before world, lately with the Chicago Civ-. climbing in? i Opera.f I t2RQ Mu a *Ml le 1 4 s i n f n r .. t, r -._ ., _ .. .s _.... ._. .,. .,-.. .., _....:. i.. .:.. 777 ,777 7 . t7 FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Min., Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, D. D. Associate Minister, Rev. Samuel J. .Harrison Student Director, Mr. Ralph Johnson. Mrs. Robert Win- ters, Advisor of Women Students. 10:30 A. M.-Wesleyan Guild Lec- Hire. "WHO IS JESUS~ CHRIST?" BISHOP THOMAS NICHOLSON of the Detroit Area. 12:00 M.--Three Discussion Groups led by Prof. S. F. Gingerich, Prof. George E. Carrothers and Mr. Ralph R. Johnson. 6:00 P. M.-Wesleyan Guild Devo- tional Meeting. 7:30 P. M.-Evening Worship. "JESUS SCALE OF VALUES," Rev. Samuel J. Harrison. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division Sts. Merle H-. Anderson, Minister Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwell, Secretary for Women Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwell, Counsellor. for University Women. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "The Heart of the N. T." 12:00 N.-Student Class. Teacher: Prof. H. Y. McClusky. HILLEL FOUNDATION 611 . Ujiversity Dial 3779 (Plase note chanige of location and different hour of service). 7:30 P. M.--Religious Service at chapel in Women's League. Dr. Frank Gravin, Prof. in the General Theological Seminary, New York will speak. 8:30 P.M . to 10:30 P. M. "Couple" open House. 1- <' It il 5:30 P. M.-Social Hour for Young, People, 6:30 P. M.-Young Peopie's Meet- ing. Program of Christmas music. :s I.N FIRST BAPTIST CGURCH. On East Huron, west of State Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister Howard R. Chapman, Minister for Students. 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. Mr. Sayles will preach. Topic: "The Measure of Greatness." 12:00 N.-Church School. 9:45 A. M.-Students' Class meets at Guild House. 5:30 P. M.-Meet at Guild House for Friendship Hour., 6:30 P. M.-Devotional Meeting. Sigurd Nepstad, '30E, will speak on "Where Do We Need New Standards." .j , Radio UNITY Services EVERY SUNDAY MORNING from The Detroit Civic Theatre V. P. RANDALL will speak on "JUDAS HANGED HIMSELF" Thbis isa part of the regaalar Unity Service which begins atI1:00 A. K and which it conducted by- The DETROIT UNITY CENTER 4108 Woodward Ave. Broadcast by W J R Detroit 11:30 a. i. Eastern Standard Time FIRST CONGREGATIONAL State and William Allison Ray Heaps, Minister 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "Magnificent Obses- sion." A sermon based upon the recent book by Lloyd C. Douglas, formar pastor of this church. 5:30 P. M.-Student Fellowship. Lecture by Prof. A. Franklin Shull-"Pan Science." Union are not all that might be and that no action has been forth-1 coming from the Union itself, the.1 Student council has lent its ap- I proval to the substitution of the merit system for selecting Union , officers in place of the present most interest to the great army of the nation's . coffee drinkers-50,- 000,000 more or less by a conserva- tive estimate. In this day and age of forbidden beverages something may turn up to forbid the manu- facture, sale, or transportation of method of election by the campus Anyway, we have always vaguely wondered what happens to all the at large. The Council will cirulate woffeew nt hasen alput- coffee we drink. It has been a puz- a petition which; when it has been zle why it keeps us awake when e signed by 200 students, will be sent want to sleep, and makes us sleepy to the Union Board of Directors for when we want to wake up. We hope action. too that the Columbia department For more than five years The of psychology will find out what happens when werdrink these pat- Daiiy has favored this change and L1, i! BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH (Evangelical Synod of N. A.) E! Ii ; Fourth Ave. between William Packard and ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division and Catherine Sts. Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Rev. T. L. Harris, Assistant has supported it wholeheartedly. ented mochas with the caffein re - -Snooks. In 1917 she was heard at an Ann Heretofore, however, the initiative e*Arbor May Festival, in a Friday; has been taken by the Union. But I 0'Reseach, what is not cor- You bet, Snooks. And we remem- evening concert, and Festival pa- now, members of the Board, real y name ber a fire once during which the trons of that day still recall the izing that their previous efforts j -Ifiremen threw all the china from profound impression which she have met with scant success, are a third story window and stuggled made. She has not been heard in not in favor of allowing another Editorial Comment and grunted, as they carried the Ann Arbor since that time owing farcical vote to be taken on the mattresses downstairs and out the to conflict of engagements, absence qu st om a f o t c nfitdf en a e m n s, a se c question. front door from the country, etc. Until Tuesday the proposed am- "MUSTN'T TOUCH-"d She is one of those rarely versa- endment was no nearer to adoption (Sky News) Considering which we don't tile singers who can both flame in than at the time of its original pro- The world may speed its pace in blame the victim pictured below. opera and charm in concert. Per- posal. However, with the action of every other respect, but college:-t - ---- haps her renown as a singing act- the Council, coming as it does from faculties, it seems, cling to their ress is due not entirely to the fact - representatives of the-student body, archaic policy of coddling the un- that she has lived her life mostly the amendment will undoubtedly dergraduate. ,'LL on the opera stage, but also to the be brought before the campus pre- f We have a new instance in the - /4 ric=testimony of her audiences that vious to the end of this semester. action of the dean of students at -Iher fine dramatic personality in- Although the Council makes no I the University of Michigan, forbid- evitably vitalized into concert ope- attempt to formulate the details ding the use of airplanes by stu- __ra. Anyway, she stands unique, per- of a plan whereby the merit system dents for pleasure. So far as the ;haps with Sophie Braslau, as an may be established, it does say that campus is concerned, airplanes are Referring aain to the new ping- operatic singer, who is consistenly at least the president and record- placed in the same category as au- g s, successful on concert stage. ing secretary of the Union (possib-I pong tables at the Union, we un- FoheAnArrcnersii ing secretary of the Union (possib- tomobiles, already tabooed except derstand that if sufficient interest Fo her Ann Arbor concert she ly other elective officers also) for special purposes. shown in the game more tables -1has, built the following program: should be appointed on the basis: Obviously no one wants to see a will be set up. That's o.k., but how Pastorale ................ Varacini of merit. Other minutia of the pro- group of irresponsible young men much interest will we have to show Piaceri Fanciulleschi......Mozart posed amendment will be worked run hog wild with airplanes, 0r in order to have the name chang- I Bergerette ................... Reclij out after the signed petition has ;with automobiles, for that matter. -ed Table tennis is a whole lot bet- Spirte put, spirate.......Donaudy been presented to the Board. But how does the youth cease be- terii-C'Qst mon ami.........Old French If the merit system is establish- ing irresponsible unless he has the * * * Nocturne ..................Franck AA if wii:,11 ,vr,,k-f-nly m an ht4 nn. 1 nrtH,,-.4.,t n to n.Inr. ie. i_, ,-, *.-. ,-..rip in m An n-i ,.., H Rev. Theodore R. Schmale 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. 10:00 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: Four Great Advent Hymns. II Benedictres or theI song of Zacharias. 11:00 A. M.-German Service. 7:00 P. M.-Young People's League. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St. at Fifth Ave. F. C. Stellihorn, Pairor BE CONSISTENT [N YOUR RELIGTON ATTEND CHURCH REGULARLY 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.-Holy Communion. (Student chapel in Harris Hall.) 9:30 A. M.-Church School. (Kin. dergarten meets at 11 o'clock.) 11:00 A. M.-Morning Prayer; ser- mon by Rev. Frank Gavin, D.D. 6:30 P. M.--Student Supper in Harris Hall; speaker the Rev. Frank Gavin, D.D. 7:45 P. M.-Evening Prayer; ad- dress by Mr. Lewis, "The Parable of the Pounds." 11 F - FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENTISTr 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A. M.-District Prsident William Lehman, D.D., will Rev. give the sermon. 12:00 M.--Student Bible Class. 5:30 P. M.--Student Fellowship and Supper. 10:30 A. M.-Regular Morning Serv. ice. Sermon topic: "God the Only Cause and Creator." 11:45 A. M.-Sunday School follow. ing the morning service. 7:30 P. M.-Wedesday Evening testimonial meeting. The Reading Room, 10 and 11 ST. PAUL'S I UTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty Sts. C. A. Braier, Pastor 9:00 A. M.--German. 10:00 A. M.--Bible School.. 11:00 A. M.-English. Sermon: "The, Second Psalm." 6:00 P. M.-Student Supper. 1111 6:30 P. M.-Talk on "Traveling Ex- periences" by Robert Sha~w. 11 11cs It 11 I