THE MICHIGAN DAILY Publishcd 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 for republication of all news dis- patches crediled to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and ,'the local news published herein. E;ntered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as soetud 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. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY, Editorial' Chairman..... ,....George C. Tilley City Edit*.... ....... iecee1oscnberg News Editor... ..........Donald J. Kline Sports editr . -.Edward L. Warner, Jr. WXomhehn's IElitor.."......-Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editoi-----------assain A. Wilson Music and Dram.........William J. Gorman Literary ,Editor...........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant(City s Iditor. - .Robert J. Feldman Night 'Editors--Editorial Board Members Frank E,. Cooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kx i Walter W. Wilds Gurney Williams Reporters Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Barec1David M.. Nichol Maxwell Bauer William Page Mary L. Behymer Howard H. Peckham Benjamin 11. BerentsonlTugh Pierce Allan H. Berlkman Victor Rabinowitz Arthur J. Bernstein John D. keindel S. Beach Conger Jeannie Roberts Thomas M. Cooley Joseph A. Russell John H. Denler oseph Ruwitch Helen Dornine William P. Salzarulo Margaret Eckels Charles R. Sprowl Kathearine Ferrin. S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton June Thaver of crime is the odd assertion of Dr. T. H. Briggs, professor of edu- cation at Columbia University, whose attack on the present educa- tional system featured a recent lecture at Harvard. "Secondary schools are handi- capped," stated Dr. Briggs, "be- cause of the expectation that they shall prepare for higher education{ of academic kinds more students than are fit to profit by it." Dr. Briggs further asserted that present day preparatory institu- tions are "passing the buck" to the colleges and universities in regard- ing elementary work as purely'a' subsidiary sort, to be followed by four years of "higher education." That too many students are being annually "shipped" a way to. col- leges only to fail is still another, fact brought out by Dr. Briggs. "Secondary education is too sec- ondary," says the Columbia educa- tor. "We stress the cultural too highly. We forget that the major- ity will never 'finish' their educa- tion in a college or university." In his lecture before the Har- vard group, Dr. Briggs emphasized the importance of education as a long term investment, stating that "One good teacher is worth a whole platoon of police. Because of what they have failed to do, our schools are in a' large measure responsible for this country's} shameful crime record." 7- . cuv . Au cn. ti r Ruth Geddes Margaret Thompson Among his numerous criticisms Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin of secondary rti Jack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine education as pacc- Morris Croverman Harold 0. Warren, Jr. ed in the United States today, the Ross (lustin charles White Margaret s G. onel Wi l y lecturer stressed one point in par David B. Hiempstead John E Willoughby ticular which seems to drive home J. Cu li Kennedy Nathan Wise Jean Levy Barbara Wright in the middle-western system of Russell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit Dorothy Magee public schools. The gap between BUSINESS STAFF'lower and higher branches of edu- BUSINSS SAFF cation is too wide, in Dr. Brigg's BUSINESS MAn AGER opinion. Rather than assuming the high school to be a "finishing" A. J. JORDAN, JR. school for most people, American Assistant Manager educatorsrseem to have the distort- ALEX K. SCHERER ed notion that it is a "lower branch Department Managers of college, preparing the. student Advertising.............T. Hollister Mabley only for further academic work." Advertising.............Kasper }i. Halverson In the East, with the domination of Advertising.............Sherwood A. Upton Service..................George A. Spater Circulation................JV ernor Davis Accounts ..................... John R. Rose! Publications...........George R.hHamilton Business Scretary-Mary Chase - Assistants .Birne I2adetbetch rin Kobacker Janes E. Cartwright Larence Lucey Robert Crawford Thomas Muir Hafrry . Culver George R. Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford Norman Eliezer Lee. Slayton ames Hoffer Joseph Van Riper Norris' Johnson obert Williamson Charless Kline j iamR. Worboy Laura Cadling Sylva Miller Agnes Davis helen E. nusselwhite Bernice Glaser Eleanor walkinshaw ortense Gooding Dorothea Waterman Alice MCully Night Editor-:--ROBERT L. SLOSS TUESDAY JANTJARY 14, 1930 OUR ERRATIC BUSES S t u d e n t transportation, first made a problem of concern by the auto ban, has been further ham- pered-and seriously so-by the re- cent change of schedule by the bus companies. Students living out of the half-mile circle are finding it difficult to get to classes and re- turn home on time and the conges- tion of passengers has reached a stage that warrants the serious consideration of the transportation officials. Students have come to rely on bus service because it is ordinarily convenient and cheap; but many of them lately have been forced to forsake the bus lines and rely on the more expensive, but at least convenient, taxis. The bus com- panies are justified in changing schedules if, as reported, their de- creasing financial returns make such changes necessary; . but the reorganization has not been' made with an eye to the regular student trade. Those students living out on Washtenaw avenue are now faced with the proposition of catching buses that in no way coincide with their class schedules, thereby in- curring a waste of time that is ap- palling and an amount of incon- venience that makes criticism just. It's all very confusing. If the bus companies feel that student trade does not warrant special buses, or at least a slight change in the present schedule, it would sem to be the psychological moment for the taxi companies to step in with a jitney service de- signed for students. At ten cents a passenger they should be able to reap a harvest during the four-a- day student rush period and fill in the business gap that must exist for them during the day. At any rate, something should, be done to relieve the present inex- cusable congestion. If buses are ap- erated for the purpose of making money by furnishing transporta-3 tion, bus officials should keep in mind the peculiar transportation problems occasioned by .student patrons and plan their schedules1 accordingllv. private schools, such a gap is even wider, for even the manual arts have been eliminated on many sea- board curricula. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. Annymous oo- mnnncations will be disregarded. Thie names ofcommunicants will, however, be regarded as confidentil,>upo .c- quest.- Letters published 811001d not e construed as expresisng the editorial opinion of The Daily. PROFESSORS' SALARIES. The subject of professorial sal- aries seems to , be a favorite one these days. Ideas regarding it are being thrown back and forth like rubber balls. Some writers favor increases, others are opposed to them. Some think that professors can live on "literature, science and arts," others that they must have something more substantial in or- der to keep going. The only thing that can throw light upon this subject is - facts. It is well known that teachers and preach- ers have nearly always been un- derpaid. That such has been, and still is the case is surprising inas- much as education and religion have generally been considered universal remedies, of all human ills. Now why is it that teachers and preachers should be poorly paid? The reason is not far to seek: it is that education and re- ligion have much, less of a hold on man than the vast output of writ- ings on these subjects would make one believe. In other words th'y affect men's minds only semi-oc- casionally and generally quite su- perficially. The things that rule men's lives are pleasure of every kind, athletics and sport general- ly, but above all, in America at f least-business. The Fords, Rocke- fellers, Morgans, and the sporting heroes are our gods. There is an unverified rumor - according to which the directors of athletics re- ceive higher salaries than univer- sity presidents. In a recent speech President Day of Union College referred to football coaches who re- ceive $18,000 a year. As for business, it may be said that if the proprie- tor of a concern is an able busi- ness man he is usually assured of an adequate income. On the other hand, no matter how well a professor understands his "business" he is rarely on an equal footing with a business man. At thi's pint one may ask whether a great professor should be coin-- pensated according tq the stan- dard of a thriving buiness man. The answer to this question is: and why not? Is education of less value than business? is a distin- guished professor hiferior in any sense to a great business man? The question may be stated in an- other way, namely, what would business be without the civilizing 4,infl a a nppAof afmiSrp 9 T in,,, n i ness civilization." This subject has V been brilliantly treated in the Jan- uary number of Harper's Maga- zine: "Can Business be Civilized?"a For a fuller development of this subject consult the masterly book by James Truslow Adams: Our Bus- iness Civilization (929).; A little persona; iiistory of the writer of this may interest then reader. During a period of nearly a third of a century of teaching ata a university he was enabled to live on his salary exactly seven years. For the remaining twenty-fivet years he had to have recourse to other means in order "to keep thef wolf from the door." Such is theY beauty and charm of the profes-I sorial calling!1 But for Lhe presen we may pass over the question of salaries of' those who occupy the higher po- sitions in our universities for the reason that there is now a move-3 ment on foot according to whicht first-class men will in all proba- bility be rewarded according to merit: "a consummation devoutly to be wished." What I wish to do in this paper; is to call particular attention to those who are hardest hit by pres- ent conditions, namely, the able instructors. Some of these young men have served a number of years,< three, four, and even longer, are; doing excellent and highly respon- .sible work in recognition of which they, receive a salary of $1500 to start with and thereafter an an- nual increase of one hundred dol- lars a year or nothing at all. I am now paying $5 a day for the 'most ordinary kind of unskilled la- bor. Counting 300 working days, the workman gets $1500. In order to preparenfor this kind of work, all the man had to do was to give himself the trouble of being born. According to a recent report in The New York Times, street clean- ers in that city receive an' annual I increase of from 240 to 300 dollars. "Yet such is the generous treatment of able instructors who have usual- ly spent from five to seven years in undergraduate and g r a d u a t e study in preparation for the ca- reer of university teaching. Now let us suppose that these instruc- tors are fortunate or unfortunate enough to be married. Then a few things are liable to follow as the result of inadequate salaries. The instructor has to eke out his sal- ary by tutoring or other work which reduces the' energyand en- thusiasm which he has for teach- i ing. In case of sickness the family I gets into debt, borrows money - and perhaps is in dire straits as the result of which anxiety takes the better part of the man's energy. How much time has he left to think of scholarly pursuits? The plea that there is no money sdoes not hold. If there Is no money to. pay the teaching force adequate- ly, then why a great university? But anyone familiar with condi'- tions knows that there is ample money. Huge sums are expended for "the plant," for libraries, for laboratories, for equipment gener- ally, for heating and lighting and, last, but by no means least, for the l administrative machinery. Do any of these fulfill the primary pur- poses of a university? Is it not true that teaching and original, work are the first and foremost functions of a real uni- versity and that everything else jmrnust yield to these? Now accord- kig to present conditions every- thing that should. come second holds first place. Thus, for instance, it seems that tie administrative officers are paid on the standard of business men, whereas the pro- fessors and more especially the in- structors are paid on the meager scale of employees or clerks. When universities and churches, govern- ed by business men, are turned in- to factories aild business houses, i. e., when business methods are ap- plied to them, then religion and education have played their last card and lose that for which they were primarily established. Their" idealism is suppressed and per- verted. When the administrative officers next in rank to the presi- dent are much more amply com- pensated than the professors, one is justified in asking who is doing the real brain work in our universi- ties. It is not done by administra- tors but by the great teachers and7 original workers. Now it happens, of course, that some administra- tors are excellent teachers and conspicuous original workers in whi'ch case, they are of the status7 of the professors amid should be re- warded accordingly. Administra- tive work per se is chiefly businessc and to a large extent red tape,l neither of which, in a great univer- sity, deserves to be rated as highf as the intellectual works. The topsy-turviness of condi- tions in the Halls of Higher Learn- c ing is amazing. Those who sufferc most from it are the capable in- " Tr .s ,-f - iI-.. n _ I. 0)'1 =c -- COLUMBIA MASTERWORKS SERIES. Recent Issues. . I Music And Drama y/ t ', ' 1: ii t TYPEWRITING and W IMEOGRAPHING A specialty for twenty years. 'rompt service.. Experienced op- rators.. Moderate rates. 0. D. MORRILL 14 South State St. Phone 6615 STATIONERY BRAHMS: Violin Concerto in Dj3 major, Op. 7i7; by Joseph Szigeti - and Halle Orchestra, conducted by Sir Hamilton Harty. This work is of considerable in- terest lo'cally because of its per- formance in the May Festival last year by Efram Zimbahst. Written for. Brahm's greatest friend Joachim, it had considerable difficulty in ob- taining recognition even with Joach- im, the greatest virtuoso of his day, as protagonist. Today, every' violin- ist daring to appear frequently on the concert stage has it in his rep- ertoire. The writing is interesting as "a rebuttal of the thesis that Brahms struggles too much in the' act of composition." Brahms here has reverted to a youthful straightfor-! wardness and simplicity vividly in contrast to the elaborate introver- Ginn rf tf-h cvmnh ni H Lic erv- Sororities Make appointments at once for Ensian group pictures. The alotted time is much s orter this year. and needs no tongue - to tell°about you; its texture, its quality, its appearance- the very crispy cackle the en- velope gives as it is opened-_ arc eloquent to eye and car and inger-tips. Old I lampshireStationery is eloquent in just this way-it tells volumes about you, about your taste and good judgment. Ilampshire Paper Co. Ric Statiuncry Dcpartment South Hladley Falls, Mfass. % 4 A COMPLETE LINE OF FRAMES STUDIO 334 SOUTH STATE STREET PHONE 5031 PHOOQ\Y FHS READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! 'I wou oie ymnpaunie. ±Ls cry- stallization is accomplished at a somewhat lower level of simplifica- tion than. any of his other well- known works in large forms. The orchestration, though admirable, is unusually transparent and obvious. The themes even haven't the usual long "span of apperception" that makes their comprehension a breath-taking experience. All this fluency and simplicity of expres- sion-amounting almost to virtuo- sity in the sense that Mozart was a virtuoso-composer-makes for immediacy of effect. The attitude' --a youthful conquering fellow, es- serting vigorously his will to battle -is communicated simply without much effort from the listener - which can be the very essence of a musical experience when the writing is good as it is here. ' The present recording is certain- ly the best available. The only other one is Fritz Kreisler's for Victor. As is so frequently the case, Kreisler's emotional predisposi- tion frequently robs the music of its intended effect. He thinks of the solo part as primarily something to be iastered. -Thus he polishes and refines andl calms everywhere with his brilliant technique. His own calm-the calm of maturity- dominates the music. Certainly in the last movement (marked gio- coso) his passivity and lack of en-f thusiasm absolutely denies the Diu- sic its real puipose. Szigetti, a young Hungarian violinist who has made several trips to America, is more faithful to the text because' more enthusiastic. He realizes that part of the expression of the last movement is the near "unplayable- ness" of the solo part. His tech- nique is quite as brilliant as Kreis- ler's but ndct quite as smooth. Thp result, in this case, is much hap- pier. Szigetti receives much better support from the Halle orchestra than Kreisler gets-another con- sideration which makes this latest issue of Cplumbia an interesting one. BRAIMS: Quintet in R M ino for clarinet and strings; by Charles Draper and the Lever String Quar- tct. .r kqk RESIDENCES OF DISTINCTION FOR SALE 401 LENAWEE DRIVE-10 room, brick cons ruction, large lot overlooking Huron River and Valley. Two tile baths, large library. Owner leaving Ann Arbor. 1926 NORWAY ROAD-10 room Colonial-lot 80x165-beautiful trees and shrubbery---2 baths- gas furnace-electric refrigeration-garage-owner leaving city. Price reduced. Terms. 1954 CAMBRIDGE ROAD-11 rooms, 2 baths, heated garage. Wooded lot. Owner has left Ann Arbor. Near University and grade school. 1705 WASHTENAW AVE.-13 rooms, large lot, 9 bedrooms. Could be used for organization. Terms are offered. 1017 OAKLAND-t4ourteen rooms, three baths. Possession at once.- Suitable for fraternity or so- rority. Terms. An exchange might be considered on some of the above mentioned. Fraternities .I v.' 1 "I _ , _ . '' L - Telephone 22571 Evenings 6125 BROOKS-NEWTON, Inc. REALTORS BROOKS BUILDING y UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION SERIES PRESENTS o nNnS LonECvies IN HIS LECTURE .a ;.: "The English This issue is ituportant for the very reason of the work's unavail- ability on the concert stage. It fs one of the four compositions that Brahms wrote in the last few years of his life for clarinet com- bination. The stimulus again was a freiend; this time Professor Muhl- field, clarinettist of the Meininger Orchestra. It was in line, however, with a definite tendency in the later Brahms to experiment with color. It is a much bigger and more important work than the concerto, however strange that play sound. It is associated more clearly with that emotional necleus that we know to have been the real Bramums. The attitude here is more clearly Brahmns-a sad perplexity, an 1n- reasoned sadness, the nelancholy of a superficially happy man that feels sadness as the quality of the world. His writing is inore intro- verted here= than in the concerto. It aims to be more inclusive and more profound. The writing i16com plex enough to convey the individ- ual emotional apprehension precise ly and sinultaneously refer that ap- prehension, to the funda me niital emotional complex out of which it arises. Brahmns in this composition, one of his last ones of course, arti- culates the profoundity of and complexity of his experience more successfully than in most works where lhe hnaheen eonn11v ambit Distinguished British Writer Lnd Man of Affairs. Author of "A Short History of Faith" and recent candidate for Parliament in the Epsom Division of Surrey. AUTHOR-LECTUR ER-JOURNALIST .# u January ' 8:00. -A Mr. Langdon-Davies is to fill the place of William Hard who has been called to the Naval Parley. . f i 1111 111