rAOE rOUA1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY - .. i i i ice/ Published every morning except Monday during 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 forerepublication 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- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. I T, EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editor......................George C. Tilley City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg Ntws Editor.............George E. Simons Sports Editor ........ Edward B. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor ............Marjorie Follmer TelegraphEEditorr......... George Stauter Mt~psic and Drama ........ William J Gorman Literary Editor..........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor....-Robert J. Feldman Night Editors Frank E. Cooper Robert L. Sloss William C. Gentry Gurney Williams, Jr. Henry J. Merry Walter Wilds Charles R. Kaufman Reporters Charles A. Askren William Page Helen. Bare Gustav R. Reich Louise Behymer John D. Reindel Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts W. H. Crane Joe Russell Ledru E. Davis Joseph F. Ruwitch Helen Domine William P. Salzarulo Margaret Eckels George Stauter Katherine Ferrin Cadwell Swanson Carl Forsythe Jane Thayer Sheldon C. Fullerton Margaret Thompson Ruth Geddes Richard L. Tobin Ginevra Ginn Beth Valentine J. Edmund Glavin Harold O. Warren Jack Goldsmith Charles S. White . B. Hempstead, Jr. G. Lionel Willens James C. Hendley Lionel G. Willens Richard T. Hurley J. E. Willoughby Jean H. Levy Barbara Wright Russell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit Lester M. May BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertisings............ Hollister Mabley Advertising........... Kasper H. Halverson Advertising.................Sherwood Upton Service ................... .George Spater Circulation.................J. Vernor. Davis Accounts............. .... ..,..Jack Rose Publications................George Hamilton Assistants Howard W. Baldock Raymond Campbell James E. Cartwright Robert Crawford Harry B. Culver Thomas M. Davis Jamnes Hoffer Norris Johnson Cullen Kennedy Charles Kline Miarvin Kobacker Lawrence Lucey George, Patterson Norman Eliezer Anson Hoex Robert Williamson Thomas Muir Charles Sanford Lee Slayton Roger C. Thorpe William R. Worboys Jeanette Dale Bessie V. Egeland Bernice Glaser Helen E. Musselwhite HortenseaGooding Eleanor Walkinshaw Alice McCully Dorothy Stonehouse Dorothea Waterman Marie Wellstead the weakling crowd outnmen of sterner stuff. The demand, inci- dentally, is for college-trained men, not college-mollycoddled men. THE TEST OF A DECADE No debate club need ever feel at a loss for a lively subject for discussion as long as the Eigh- teenth Amendment remains part of the nation's law. Glance into the smoking room of almost any Pullman car and you will probably overhear heated arguments be- tween hitherto perfect strangers on this same topic. But what does it all mean and how are these in- significant opinions going to rem- edy the complicated situation which now exists? Many organizations through out the country have long fought the liquor problem, notably the Anti- Saloon league and the W. C. T. U. Finding that they could accomplish little or nothing toward the en- forcement of prohibition after they had managed to foist it upon a shortsighted country, these organ- izations have recognized the need for combination and have formed a "new central agency to co-ord- inate the activities of the coun- try's many prohibition agencies." At the same time that these agencies are arraying their com- bined front in battle formation comes the announcement from Private Citizen John L. McNab that he will perform his "patriotic duty" though it be a "burden," by for- mulating legislation to bring about better prohibition enforcement and relief of court congestion. This is simply added evidence that the supporters of the Eighteenth Amendment realize their precari- ous position and that the last hope lies in the centralization of power and unification of forces. A decade, to most persons, would seem ample time to test a law from the standpoint of prac- ticability, and to weigh its advan- tages against its disadvantages Prohibition h a s accomplished much for the poor and certain other classes, but consider the toll in life taken'every year, every day A score burned to death in a speak- easy fire, youths killed by suspic- ious officers, hundreds murdered by rival racketeers. . . . The test o1 a decade does not seem to have proved the value of the law. What developments will come o1 McNab's undertaking and the com bination of the nation's temper ance organizations will assuredly be watched with. great interest Perhaps their work will be the ac in the hole. ABOLISHING HAZING (The Detroit Free Press) The decision of Columbia sopho mores to abolish the time-honore practice of hazing has been follow ed by provocative acts on the par of the first-year classmen that ma necessitate the restoration of thi unofficial course in the freshma curriculum. The subject has bee revived by the painting of a "33 on South Field, within plain vie of Alma Mater, as she sits in braz en effigy on the steps of the millio dollar library building erected b Seth Low out of the fortune rolle up on the China coast by Abie Abbott Low, years ago. Althoug the numerals were promptly re moved, a faction in the class o 1932 apparently thinks that the in sult should be wiped out and thos who perpetrated it put in thei places and kept there. Whether it is to be war or peac depends largely upon the freshme: at Columbia and at many othe American universities, where me: who have been a whole year on campus have discovered bette ways of putting in their time tha: fooling around with a bunch o kids still unweaned from their pre school ways. As long as freshme: persist in living up to their nam they are likely to find sophomore who regard taking some of th freshiess out of them as a solemi obligation to alma mater and th cause of higher education in gen eral. The unappreciative conduct o the freshmen on Morniingsiid Heights has points in common wit] that of certain larger aggregation of more mature individuals yclep nations. They have to be remind ed of their place in the worlk Otherwise they would become a annoyance to those who have t live with them. As long as hazin does no more than that to under classmen it is not to be altogethe condemned. The purpose of i should be to humiliate, withou annihilating. Skulls need not t be fractured to let out a little c ! About Books" FALL ANNOUNCEMENTS Gesticulating Lindsay Vachel Lindsay, native trouba- dour poet, makes it known through the MacMillan publishers that an- other volume of his verse, "Every Soul Is A Circus," will be circu- lated this month. The notice should prove a curiosity for the students on the Michigan campus for it was just one year ago that Mr. Lindsay visited Ann Arbor under the auspices of the Inlander and gave a recital of this poem. There was much consternation among the Toasted Rolls editors last October when the poet hand- ed out mimeographed sheets to those attending the recitation and requested a general refrain of "Bring, bring, the wonders down." Indeed, the whole university was humming the ditty for a day or so. This new book of Mr. Lindsay's, like his "Candle in the Cabin," and "The Congo and Other Poems" is illustrated by whimsical draw- ings from the author's own pen. Then, the directions in the margin of the page which are such a dis- traction to so many readers: all this is there. In the foreword to the edition, the author discusses the experiments he has made for combining recitation with dancing and choral gesture. After last year's entertainment some campus writer declared that the gesticula- tions of Lindsay's poems were their greatest feature. The troubadour heartily agrees with this in his in- troduction to "Every Soul is a Cir- cus." He thinks he has rescued poetry from the library and re- stored to the art its early dignity as a social exercise. Mrs. Woolf Opines Interesting among the announc- ed books for the fall is "A Room of One's Own" by Virginia Woolf. Just as "Orlando" contains some of the 1 most brilliant literary and histori- cal comment of our age, and the famous essay, "Mr. Bennet and Mrs. Brown," as much color, human sig- nificance, and aesthetic form as a f piece of fiction-so this new book, we are informed, manifests Mrs. Woolf's ability to see in all direc- f tions and from all points of view - at once, and then create an artis- - tic whole from her observations. It is the account of a visit to an English college with the auth- - or's reflections on many subjects- the relations of men and women, wealth and poverty, and their ef- fects upon life and literature. The book is scheduled to be distributed about the last of this month, The - Daily has placed its order with the publishers and will offer a review - as soon as the copies are circu- t lated. y s "Seven Iron Men" n Paul de Kruif, a new writer, wh n has achieved much popular succes; with his "Microbe Hunters" an v "Hunger Fighters" has publisheda - new book which is called "Seve n Iron Men." The new work isa y discussion of the downfall o d American individualism. It is th A true and tragi-comic story of th h rise and fall of the iron-huntin family of Merritts, pioneers o f northern Minnesota; the story o - the conflict of the American pio e neer spirit with industrialism. Th r Merritts discovered the great Mis sa-be Iron Range, and three year e after the discovery were penniless n but the iron of the range was be r ing poured into the steel frame o n American civilization. a The industrialist and the finan r cier superseded the pioneer. Wal f Street had outwitted Minnesota A Not that it mattered to the Mer p' ritts !They went back to the bust n to look for more iron. And th e fact that they did not find it wa s all right, too. America now ha( e plenty of iron. n The geologic, geographic back e ground makes the Merritts an - money-barons seem insignificant The book is the history of the f American continent, but histor; e made by geographic necessity, nol h by men. s Luther Biographer - Of the books in biography tha 1. are scheduled to be published thi n fall, "Martin Luther: A Destiny,' o by Lucien Lebvre promises to bi g among the worth while. Mr. Lebvri - is a professor at the University o r Strassburg, and has attempted il it his work to present psychologica t and philosophical study of the grea: o reformer. f Luther has always been overwrit MusicAnd Drama 00 "PYGMALION" It is disconcerting to see the Theatre Guild, the theatre in which we are trying to be so proud, blundering into the typically ama- teur conception of that theatrical scapegrace, Bernard Shaw. In all amateur and most professional cir- cles Shaw is already that tragic person-a radical towards whom everyone is indulgent, whose beard- ed chin everyone chucks kindly. He is made out as a perserve, comic sentimentalist, not to be taken very seriously. Hence when it comes time for production of his plays he is thought of and played as a purveyor of delightfully enter- tertaining comedy. This mistake is deplorable and leads to such a disappointing-yea, - even stupid-production as the Guild is giving "Pygmalion." The difficulty of a Shavian production is well-known. The trouble, as itI appears to me, is that he is essen- tially a thinker; his dramas very largely dramatised discussions. Thus his dialogue is very seldom the conventionally social spech from which we ordinarily imagine his character; it is most always the di- rect expression of the thought of the characters, which is quite a dif- ferent thing. Thus actors in a Shavian production must have the intelligence to completely build in their minds a character; gestures, intonations, appearance, and man- ner have to be imaginatively con- ceived with but little reference to the text. The difficulty appears clearly in the part of Marchbanks in "Cand- ida." A certain local actor in his own professional production of this play some years ago fitted gesture and manner to the wildness of the poet's speech with amazing, tech- nical accuracy; the result was very low comedy, quite annoying to those who think the part and the play good. The same thing hap- pened to the two leads in the Guild production of "Pygmalion." Miss Inescort in her first few scenes as a guttersnipe played her vulgar lines like the feminine part- ner of a music-hall Apache dance, eliciting many loud but cheap laughs. The result was that her transition to the refined girl, sen- sitive and even proud, (which Shaw meant to be absolutely real),was in- credibly romantic. Eliot Cabot as the professor adid quite as badly. Shaw gave him humorous, unconventional lines, lines that expressed his thoughts; Cabot -proceeded to match the lineswith most uncon- ventional tearing of hair and strut- ting. The result was an amusing caricature of what Shaw possibly meant the character to be. The transformation of the girl's speech used broadly for humor and - as a symbol of the superficial way to respectability was the least im- portant motive of "Pygmalion." More important was a study in the o peculiar depth and twists of a s human relation--a thing which d Shaw notably understands. The a actor and actress playing the Pro- n fessor and Eliza should project a clearly the uncompromising, un- f changing misogyny of the one e character and the shifting view- e point of the other. If this is done g the full logic of "Pygmalion" ap- pears. The last act then becomes f fluid and supple-the perfect, if - not prodigiously dramatic, expres- e sion of an absorbing type of human relations. s The Guild by concentrating on ; the more whimsical and entertain- - ing motive made "Pygmalion" a f delightful comedy that undoubtedly appealed to most of those who saw it. But to betray Shaw into the -1 hands of middle-class seekers of amusement is to do him as much ' damage as to place Alfred Doolit- tle, a member of the "undeserving e poor," at the mercy of "middle- s class morality." It is not intelli- d gent treatment of Shaw and we do expect intelligence from the Guild. ORDER YOUR DAILY AT THE DAILY OFFICE IN THE PRESS BUILDING, OR PHONE 21214 BEAUTY SHOP Presents r I 'S Ultra Jiode rn '4. Beauty Salon F!T A Y T E -S 1 2 i. a Dedicated to serve University and Ann Arbor Women Fastidious in Beautification Ideas CLASSES are being formed for the study of CHAR- ACTER ANALYSIS through pherenology, astrology, num- erology, phychology, etc. "Be your own character analyst, find your path, and become MASTER OF YOUR DESTINY" Instructor: THEO. NYLAND, author, lecturer, world traveler. Room 201, Marchese Bldg., Main St. For Information Phone 2-2370 You may not be A MAN OF LETTERS yet many a letter the college man must write-business letters, home letters, letters ofa distinctly personal and private nature ... . Letterswritten on Old Hampshire Stationery are sure of a hearing. The paper is rich, crisp, substan- tial-it has both class and quality. Hampshire Paper Co., ineStationery Departmens South Hadley Falls, Mass. 338 South State Street Phone 8878 - . . *s...A.. .. .A... . .... _ 4 I .I Ma Co Co At C® ake your liege roo1 )mfortabic tractive SSPECIAL FRIDAY and SATUR- DAY,~ 75. right figured crshons ove 17richqaekpo uhos 2 or 1.00 4 with PILLOWS h d -11 The DiMATTIA 'M Wa4lv I x "5 Second Floor Night Editor-FRANK E. COOPER FRIDAY OCTOBER 4, 1929 MOLLYCODDLED MEN With the University between presidents and the broad outlines of its policies in a state of flux or suspension, the present seems an auspicious time to inquire how much paternalism the administra- tion must practice and how little will make the students happiest. The regime of President Little, pa- ternalist extraordinary, has ended with mixed sighs of regret and re- lief-regret, we are inclined to think, for the passing of a good fellow prolific in ideas and relief for the departure of a tactless pa- ternalist. Fresh from the East, President Little toured the state, talked with some parents, and returned to Ann Arbor with the doctrine that Mich- igan was to keep on her students somewhat the same protective eye as a parent. In pursuit of this doctrine he evolved freshman week, liquor snoopers, the auto ban, foot- ball dance restrictions, deferred rushing, and the elimination of fraternities, no one of which has taken with any noteworthy degree of success or popularity. Granted that he was endeavoring to please the taxpayers who support the Un- iversity, he tactlessly ignored the feelings of a student body alert to resent insults. For it is deliberately insulting to an upperclassman to be perpetual- ly treated as a freshman. It is rec- ognized that the average freshman is younger today that he was a decade ago- and must be more carefully disciplined- but this is hardly an excuse for disciplinar- ians always thinking in terms of freshmen. Surely the upperclass- man of today is the mental and moral equal of yesteryear's yearl- ing. We do not believe in liberating the college libido to the everlast- Sstillhave faith in Darwinian sur- vival of the fittest.. Give the cal- low youngster a year or two of watching to save him from him- READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! Will WIN I 4 ,/ Z/ SI G HT ,j . y r. .: ..} "(?. t ik I 'a Inanevn THE AGE OF INNOCENCE A Review by G. W. Priers. Katherine Cornell's vehicle "The Age of Innocence," a tender and mist-like romance of the era of: primsone waistcoats, serves this talented actress well as a chance toI display her dramatic genius. As the poor and misunderstood, but ex- tremely attractive Countess Olen- ska who falls in love with an en- gaged childhood playfellow, Miss Cornell has a role in which there is a wealth of color and variedj emotions., The play as a play is not a bril- liant affair. Miss Barnes' fondness for the excessive use of long REG.U.S.PAT.OFF. 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