. ..'F--1 a-:. 1 I . "I'M7 T-CHT AN DAILY .. .. . ..e . :. . - . .T. t... u. .H T 3. . D A IL YL .4 Publishrdievery morning except Monday turing the University year by the Board in'+ Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to he use for republi'ation of allf news dis- ches credited to it or not otherwise credited this paper and the local news published kerein. Entered at the ;ostoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, astsecond class matter. Special rate of postage gr.nted by Third Assistant Post- toaster General. Subscriptionby carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices:.Ann Arbor Press Building, May- iard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, srt24. EDITORIAL STAFF1 Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman..........George C. Tilley City Editor................. Pierce Rosenberg1 News Editor.......... .Donald J. Kline Sports Editor.........Edward L. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor ..........Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editor......... Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama........William J. Gorman Literary Editor......LawrenceR. Klein Assistant City Editor......Robert J. Feldman Night Editors--lditorial Board Members Frank E. Cooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kaufman Walter W. Wilds t.urney williams Reporters Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Barc David M. Nichol Maxwell Bauer William Page Mary L. Behymer Howard I. Peckham Benjamit f-H. Berentsorel ugh Pierce Allan H. Berkman Victor Rabinowitz Arthur J. Bernstein John D. Reindel S. Beach Conger eannie Roberts ,s~omas M. Cooley Joseph A. Russell John If. Denier }foseph Ruwitch IIelen Domine William P. Salzarulo Margaret Eckels Charles R. Sprowl Xatharine.Ferrin S. CadwellrSwanson Sheldon C. Fullerton J ane Thayer Ruth Geddes Mlargaret Thompson Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin Jack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine orrisGroverman d larold 0. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret Harris G. Lionel Willens David . B. empstead John 1 Willoughby . Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise can [Lev Y 1B arbara lVright 'iusell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit Dorothy Magee BUSINESS STAFF r Teiephone 21214 1USINESSRMANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers lAdvrtisipg............T. Hollister Mabley Advertising ............ Kasper 11. IHalverson Advertising ..............Sherwood A. Upton Service ......G...........eorge A. Spater Circulation.................I. Vernor Davis Accounts................... hn R.Pose Publications................George Hamilton Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker James E. Cartwright Lavrence Lucey Robert Crawford Thomas M0uir Harry B. Culver George Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford [Norman Eliezer L ee, Slayton J ames Hoffer )oseph OVan Riper orris Johnson Robert Wiiamson Charler lnes S Wee m R. Norhoys Business. Secretary-14fgy Chase the teaching profession be consid- ered as in competition with big I business. We long have held that professors' salaries should appre- ciably be raised, but to contend that the wage level should be rais- ed to a level comparable with that of industrial salaries is to lend an1 unwarranted meretricious com- plexion to the teaching profession.1 The incongruity is made com- plete by attempting to compare the1 sales manager of an engine plant with the head of an English de- partment. The dollar and cents 1 value of the one represents its en- I tire worth, both to the individual and largely to society; the ideal- istic, rather ethereal qualities of the other profession, manifested by the love of personal sacrifice of its members which are considered anachronic by the ilk Dr. Angeli represents, far exceed the atten- dant money return and involve more worth than society can either measure or repay. Turning out bolts and nuts has little in com- mon, for comparison, with turn- ing out educations. But these other remunerations and amenities of the teaching pro- fession are peculiar to the pro- fession and constitute a basis for the respect and high esteem in which it is held. Further, as the New Republic states it editorially, "a professor of 'high intellectual ability' is, presumably, a well edu- cated man; and if education means anything at all, it most certainly means that it leads a nman out from the naive point of view in which the pecuniary criterion of value covers the universe like a blanket, into a state of mind in which val- ues are a little broader, and more complicated, and in which the simple device of measuring all things by the money you can get out of them finds itself impracti- cable." Little doubt obscures The Daily's belief that professors' salaries are too low, but it is also true that they will never be as high as those of industrialists with comparable mental ability. By all means let us work for higher salaries, but let us not set the money goal so high that the teaching profession in its present poverty is made to appear unduly tawdry in the eyes of the students and citizenry alike. 1 0 A LOBBYIST TURNS SENATOR. Appointment of Joseph R. Grun- dy, lobbyist-superissimo from Penn- Sylvania to fill the vacancy caused by the Senate's refusal to seat Wil- ham S. Vare, makes circumstances ideal for a highly spectacular side- show in the official life of the na- tion. The selection, made formally by Governor Fisher but actually the work of "Uncle Joe" himself as the omnipotent political boss of the state is not especially savory to President Hoover and certainly antagonistic to many Senators. a There are chances .that, Grundyy will not be seated, and if he is, only after a bitter and' colorful fight. President Hoover recently con- demned lobbyists and their effect on legislation, Grundy is born and bred a lobbyist. A quarter of a century ago he formed the Penn- sylvania Manufacturers' associa- tion and has been president of it ever since. In that position his ma- jor work has been the securing of high tariff protection for industries of the state. The effectiveness of his work may be seen in the fact that 42 of the 65 industries in Pennsylvania are given higher duties in the pending bill. Their estimated profit under the in- creases would be more than a bil- lion dollars. In his recent appear- ance before the Senate lobby in- vestigating committee Grundyl spoke about the sanctity of high protection for industries and of the superior right of Pennsylvania, over the "backward" states of the farm-west, to determine the na- tion's tariff policy. It is his statement about the "backward" states on top of hisj lobby activities that will make the Senate not particularly delighted to have "Uncle Joe" in their offi- cial family (he has been in their unofficial family for a score of years). Senator Nye's fiery warn- ing against the appointment of the Pennsylvanian because of his con- nection with the Mellon-Pepper, Fisher political machine (that spent two million dollars in the 1926 primary fight against the. Vare slate) is some indication of the opposition. It is not the main reason for believing that Grundy will have to fight for his seat, how- ever. Right now the low-protection Senators from what he termed the "backward" states hold the hal- About Boks a Mjsic And Drait A CURSED ROMANCE "MERRIE-GO-ROUND" BY GERTRUDE ATHERTON. A Review by George C. Tilley Dido. Queen of Hearts, The Michigan Union Opera, By Gertrude Atherton. Mimes' annual extravaganza in the Horace Liveright, New York City. gaudy vein, is again on the boards Price $2.50. steeped in the colorful, expensive, Review Copy by Courtesy of semi-professional tradition of other Wahr's Book Store. years. There are no radical de- Mrs. Atherton began writing in partures from hoary custom, and the early nineties and has publish- the sour critics of former operas will . not find the old defects remedied. ed continuously ever since. The But those happier spirits who can subjects vary; she has written of appreciate lively, sincere effort,. and historical California, of imperial who can make a few allowances Austria-Hungary. She has even for student limitations without do- uwritten a Hearst-circulated noveling violence to their critical stan- writena eart-irclatd ove jdards, will find Merrie-Go-Round of contemporary life. Once she sentd slnot through a sturdy biography of t only good but the best that the Hamilton. Mrs Atherton has always last college generation of four years has seen. It is still neither ama- been school-marmish in her writ- teur nor yet quite professional- iing, but in "Dido, Queen of Hearts" ' and it must be classified some- she brings us back to school books whd in te hazy ibo be themselves. And in a certain sense, wherei m the hazy limbo between it is daring to publish a romance musical comedy and comic opera- g p but this failure to fall into a defi- about Aneas and his wife, for the nite category cannot be invoked tot dismal curses of second year Latin mean that the show fails as a piece students rest with these characters of entertainment. Rather this in- land their original creator. o netimn ahrti n adThe authorigives us the old gang definiteness is characteristic of all Teof characters of cheap romance. similar collegiate efforts and de- Here is a towering queen whomevery tracts, to our mind, not one whit Here is atering quen wigho e y from the thrill and the enthrall- man loves. at first sight. and a mn n h ogoseso h handsome irresistible goddess-born ment and the gorgeousness of the king. Enter a gigantic, boisterous, ectacle. * 'In such a production as this it conceited tyrant. Place with him must always be the music which a faithful but timid lover and a has the power to make ormar. Aft- dead husband's memory; add an er the poer have one t- incident ' which is be-ponied in er the composers have done their' inen Lwichtet i beponty inwork, the voices and orchestra car- every Latin text in the country; ryo:ti erMmssest and you have Mrs. Atherton's story. have coralled a p irl happy Though it is probably unfair to say combinatio of allteeiarly haT that the author has shown no in- S Love, who composed 17 of the clination of originality. She does, 22 musical numbers, a special trib- for Queen Dido's suicide is not ute is owing for his "Mine Alone" caused of her desertion by Aneas. hit which is probably the best bit Rather the founder of Carthage of the entire score. Truesdale May- I dies to save her city from the wrath ers' "Vagabond's Dream," on which of the barbarian, Tarbas. Such David Hempstead as the beachcom- touches are appreciated. ber scores a vocal triumph, rank5s li But we know this tale of Virgil, a close second, and his' and he has presented it adequate- lieve in Dreams" is per ly. The author who takes to telling though Love's first act a familiar storgy assumes the re- the best manner of C sponsibility of presenting a new Sullivan is a powerful ar and original style. Mrs. Atherton ly well-executed piecec has not done this. The style of the tion. most unimaginative newspaper re- A very definite effoi porter is exhibited in this work. dently been made this y The words selected to interpret the singers and make acto characters and situations are rather than to cast the empty. She is relying upon words, available and pray Go combinations, and sound affects will be able to sing. Al] that have rendered duty hundreds with the possible excep of times. She is stale; every hill, Browne's and Byron ship, palace is described with the' are trained and amply same adjectives. Dido offers exact- In the past some of ly the same prayer every time she vocalists have scarcely goes to the temple. The descrip- first half dozen rows a' tions of the several banquet scenes ney; this year they all are all alike. "Tyrian purple" is fill the Michigan with "If You Be- haps third, Finale after Gilbert and nd singular- of composi- rt has evi- ' year to take rs of them best actors d that they I the voices, ption. of Bill Dalrymple's, voluminous. the opera's carried the t the Whit- managed to { ease and Laura Codling Agnes Davis Bernice Glaser )Tortense Gooding Alice Mct illy Sylvia 1Miller Helen . .iisselwhite Eleanor Walkinshaw Dorothea Waternian Night Editor-GURNEY WILLIAMS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1929 BLASTING SOPHISTICATION Chicago's youthful, whimsical,J forward-thinking new president re- cently pointed to Yale, his almal mater, and expressed pleasure at "the spectacle of a group of active and inventive professional schools in close relation to undergraduate! schools whose faculty and student{ personnel are constantly being ad- justed to the needs of the present day." Dr. Hutchins here put his thumb# on one of the vexing problems of American universities: namely, how to inspire undergraduates with earnestnets in their quest after knowledge. At Yale evidently, a1 partial solution has been found in bringing graduates and undergrad- uates into closer contact so that the higher seriousness and greater' purpose of the former may perme- ate and elevate the latter. It is a step in the process of transform- ing our universities from country clubs into institution, of learning. It is gratifying that Dr. Hutchins has recognized this problem and has shown a disposition to guide the transformation. He has the unique qualification of being young enough to remember his own un- dergraduate -days while he is, at the same time, chief arbiter of a uni- versity's destiny He said recently, "It is a fallacy to assume that only the stupid can be stalwart, and that, high intelligence means low vital-+ ity." Evidently he knows not only what is wrong with the college stu- dent but also (and this is vital) how to appeal to him. With sym- r pathetic understanding. he has neatly blasted the sophistication of the undergraduate bon vivant that will not allow study to interfere with pleasure. used so many times that it reminds sureness. Art Sutton. and John one of the "little" habit of James White rose to heights when they M. Barrie. sang the "Mine Alone" duet for Mrs. Atherton in reading the Di- the hand of the colonel's wife. do episode of her Anelad again has Donal Haines has celebrated the ' been stimulated by many pseudo- recognition of his authorship of ' romantic ideas. The Latin primer the opera books by producing a has re-awakened a lot of silly and plot that is adequate without a sin- ' childish ideas about the nature of gle pun, stale crack, two-line joke, kings and queens. The superficial or other traditional form of club- ideas about ancient Tyre and Car- footed humor. There are only two thage have walked pictorially in laughs, both rather doubtful, in pictorirh allgt-the spoken lines. But the book ful- S front of the author; she has got-filt ten out her pocket camera, and fills the requirements of satire, photographed them. It is a waste characteristization, and action up of time to read "Dido" unless you to the denouement which flops fstill believe in prince-charmings with poor motivation and meat-ax I sillbelevein rine-carmngssubtlety in the happy ending. and lovely god-mothers. You al- Slteto be he e dney ready know the story and (unhappi- Slated to be .the hero,: Sidney ly) the style. R. E. M Straight overacted the dreamy sol- ' dier role assigned him by the play- FOERSTER PRINTS ESSAY wright, and Bill Browne and Byron ON AMERICAN SCHOLARSHIP. Dalrymple showed a tendency to Dr. Foerster of the University of let their dialogues drag. In the first " North Carolina has recently pub- act Art- Sutton had to hem and lished through the presses of that haw while the orchestra was pick- institution an essay discussing the ing up a dropped cue, and in the conditions of American academic second act John White injected I life. The. little book, "The Ameri- some unintentional comedy when can Scholar," is a mighty blast he found his wife being kissed by against what the author believes the major and shouted "Well, I'll the greatest course of American be damned" in a tone of pleased literary scholarship, the accumu- surprise instead of anger. On two lation of insignificant facts. There occasions Hugh Claney had to Is needed the author says aemore break suddenly from his oily, vil- definitely critical attitude. "Only lanous patter into sentimental by the integration of history and song. But these minor defects were criticism, the temporary and the opening-night slip-ups rather than permanent, motion and rest, can inherent faults, and by no means the literary scholar really escape overshadowed the success of the from the superficiality and futility acting viewed by and large. that appears to crown all his la- This review would be sadly defi- , ours." Again in speaking of recent cient if it failed to mention the literary biography he says: "Ama- comic triumph of George John- teurs and dabblers of all sorts have son whose black bottom stomp and made a hasty study of both psycho- tango interlude carried on with- logy and literature and written out anticlimax the "Pow-Wow biographies and criticisms which iPoppa" standard of mirth-produc- are professedly science and actual- tion set up by Danny Buell last ly buncombe." Dr. Foerster is one 'year Johnson not only has tre- of America's most competent crit- men ous possibilities for being ics and is interested in "humaniz- funny but adds a lot 'of personl- ing" literature. The essay expres- ity, inventiveness and stage pres- ses some of the author's views for ence. revolutionizing teacaing methods The girls' chorus snapped in American universities thrnuh their 'niniv.u -rif I n. I : Rii f . NOT SO TAWDRY. President James Rowland Angell of Yale recently informed a group of professional men that to obtain maximum results in educational i t t