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January 18, 1930 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1930-01-18

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PAGE FOUR
Published every morning except Monday
<. ": m, ihe tIniversity .-ear by the Board in
(> rorol it',den : Ptrblicatians<
fn P. , A'tenconference Editorial
ociation.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled
to the use for republication 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,
Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate
of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-,
master General.
Subscription hy carrier~ $4.00; Sy mail,
Offices Ann Arho Press Building, May-
nard Street.
Phones: Editorial 4925; fusiness, 2r214,
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR
ELLIS B. MERRY
Editorial Chairman........George C. Tillye
City Editor................Pierce Roseniberg
News Editor...............Donald J. Kline
Sports Editor.......Edward L. Warner, Jr.
Women's Editor............. Marjorie Follrner
Telegraph Editor.........Cassain A. Wilson
Music and Drama........William J. Gorman
Literary Editor..........Lawrence R. Klein
Assistant City ditor. ...Robertd J.Feldman
Night Editors-Editorial Board Members
Frank 1E. Cooper I I'ry J. Merry
William C. Gen try Robert 1,. Sloss
Charles R Kauffmwan \Valter W. Wilds
Gurney Williatits
Reporters.
Bertramn Askwith Lester May
Helen Bare I )avid M. Nichol
Maxwell Baier William Page
Mary L. Behymner llowvardl 11. Peckhiam
Benjamin 11. lerentsoulukgh Pierce
Allan I. ].rkman Victor Rabinowitz
Arthur J. IBernstein JoniD1. Reindel
S. Beach Conger Jeannie Roberts
Thomas M. Cooley *Iosephl A. Russell
John 11. Dener loseph Ruwitch
Helena Dorine 'William 1. Salzarulo
Margaret Eckels (liarles RI Sprowl
Kathearine Perrin S. Cadwell Swanson
Sheldon C. Vullerton Jane Thayer
Ruth Geddes Margaret "'Thompson
Uinevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin
Zack Goldsmith tizabeth Valentine
Morris Croverman ]larold 0. ,Warren, Jr.
Ross Gustini ('harles White
Margaret Harris G. Lionel Willens
David B. Hempstcad John r. Willoughby
IR Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise
can Levy Barbara Wright
ussell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit
Dorothy Magee

1

THE MICHIGAN

DAILY

SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1930

r f w

pense of conformity with the doc-
trines of the church, "the pillar
and foundation of all truth." Ignor-
ing the labyrinths of trying to
e luate scientific truth and theo-
logical truth, if the papal head is
genuinely disconcerted by the seem-
ing paucity of spiritual values and
lyric qualities in modern living, his
tract has some credence. But the 1
encyclical so smacks of a tradition-
ally 4ide-bound plea for the su-
premacy of the church (and his
capitalization of Church particu-
larizes the plea) over the order
which modern society has erected
as to make it appear solely as an
effort at hasty self-defense against
the inroads of our present skeptic
world.
Yet-there is more optimism to be
derived from the assertion of Dr.
Robert A. Millikan at the Holiday
meeting of the American Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Sci-
ence to the effectothat science, in-
stead of being the progenitor of
physical wretchedness, has sup-
planted philosophy and religion in
ability to provide happiness and
equilibration for the individual,
than there is from the Pope's plea
'for a reversion to faith in "super-
natural laws." It may be that mor-
tals are becoming less 'capable of
the mystic experience; our guess
is that the amount of their credu-
lity has considerably reduced sinceI
the Middle Ages.
0
FROLIC FINANCES

FIRE'
POLICE!
'MURAL BLDG!
According to a story on page
one, the local firemen and police-
men are going to have a ball in
the Intramural building on Febru-
ary 17. Well, they deserve to have
a good time. The life of a fire-'
man is far from a bed of roses.
*i * *
It just occurred to me, though,
that it would be pretty tough on
any honse owner who might dis-
cover a fire in his home on the
morning of the 18th.
Retouched photo showing
tired but happy fireman ans-
swering alarm after dancing
all night.
* * *f
Rolls is all for having the Li-E
brary seal moved so that unthink-
ing students won't step on it. It
would be asking too much to ex-j
pect them to remember that step-1
ping on the seal is a breach of
will. The only satisfactory way to
maintain the worthy tradition of
keeping off the seal is to move it.
How about it,.Student council?

i ---C.

____- ._...._.r..._._
, t

'I

Music And Drama

:i

- t
PRO MUSICA OF DETROIT. {
Firmly established by the cultur-
al life of Detroit by reason of three#
years of existence-certainly test
enough in Detroit which as a city
is not at all slow in bellowing its
proletariat disapproval of all at-
tempts at culture-the Pro Musica
Society deserves its introduction to
surrounding cities. Pro Musica aimsj
at becoming an international or-
ganization with chapters in every!
important center of the world. At,(
present it has thirteen chapters in
the United States and one in Paris. I
IIt sets itself up primarily as the
sponsor of patron of modern music.
It acquiesces in the inevitable fact
that for most modern compositions
the commercial concert stage, withk
its financial considerations, has no
place. But it believes that in evern
city there is a small potential audi
ence-the aristocratic minority cer-
tainly-which, if organized proper-
ly, could make an annual survey of

1

J-HOP
HOUSE PARTY
FAVORS

11

Hark To His Master's Voice! Saying
GO To UNIVERSITY MUSI CHOUSE
For Everything Musical

Lowest
TERMS
to suit.
Play while
you pay.

Radios:-
Majestic, Victor, Crosley
Pianos:-
Baldwin, Kohler & Campbell
Orchestral Instruments
Victor, Columbia, Brunswick
Records

taw I tIAv1 TWO jb"
The beat in mm*
The lmn uin i.

ASK THOMAS HINSHAW, Mgr.

601 East William Street

Phone 7515

contemporary music possible 'and
E enjoyable. Thus, in its conception,
Pro Musica ,is logical. It is a non-
paying organization. There is no
I public sale of tickets and there are
no tickets sold for single concerts.
It demands membership, which isI
active participation, by the pay- !
ment of an annual fee, which is
small.
Already this year, the chapter

Burr-Patterson and
Auld
Fraternity Jewelers
603 Church Street
Classifed Ads

'

= ~ lllfll11tlflffllll1 !lffllltflffl1tlIt#fffiflll#! Iflf#tIll l llfl#Iu lifl'.
I--
PRINT and BOOK SHOPI
Ann Arbor Agents Chicago Civic Opera
Feb. Detroit Season
Feb. 17-23 (Eight Performances)
Place Your Orders Now!
5 521 EAST JEFFERSON TEL. 21081'
llllflllffl 1t1tfl llll 1tlfllllfllllltllltfllflll li illl lttllIII####1l1Il lfl ll ftllll .;

I

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 21214
BUSINESS MANAGER
A. J. JORDAN, JR.
Assistant Manager
ALEX K. SCHERER
Department Managers
Advertising.............. Hollister Mabley
Advertising.... ,........Kasp& rf.H.falverson
.Advertising....:........Sherwood A. Upton
Service.................George A. Spater
Circulation.....J. Vernor Davis
Accounts.............. .....John R. Rose
Publications............orge R. Hailton
Business Secretary-Mary Chase
Assistants
Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker I
James E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey I
Robert Crawford Thomas Muirj
Harry B. Culver George R. Patterson
Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford
Norman Eliezer Lee Slayton
oames Hoffer Joseph Van Riper
Norris Johnson Robert Williamson
Charles Kline William . Worboy
Laura Codling Sylvia Miller
Agnes Davis Helen E. Musselwhite
Bernice Glaser Eleanor Walkinshaw
Hortense Gooding Dorothea Waterman
Alice McCully
Night Editor-WM. C. GENTRY
SATURDAY, JANUARY18, 1930

Campus organizations, including brought Gabriel Leonotr, the Rus-
fraternities, will be prohibited from I dcunno what the Weather Man sian tenor who was engaged 'by
holding dances on the night of the on page one is predicting for today Stokowski last spring for the spc-'
Frosh Frolic, the traditional dance and tomorrow but Rolls' Weather cial performance of the Stravinsky
of the first year class, the Student Man is pretty pessimistic. Les Noces. This week Wednesday it 1
council decided at its last meeting. presents Alexander Tansman, Po-
This precaution has been taken Our Weather Man lish pianist and composer. Tans-
largely out of financial necessity, man made a successful American
but it possesses a distinct social ad- tour in 1927-28, playing his second,
vantage. Students of the Univer- piano concerto with Koussevitsky
s sity have too strong a tendency to and the Boston Symphony orche-
I isolate themselves when the up- reP stra. On the program also will be
I holding of the undergraduate tra- some of his compositions for chain
ditions are concerned. The ruling ber organizations which will be in-
will have the effect of developing terpreted by a picked ensemble
a stronger class spirit, a closer so- ,, from the Detroit Symphony orche-
cial unity, and a greater interest in For Ann Arbor and vicinity, stra.
campus functions, all of which are snow, snow and snow, today and' In March, the feature concert of
essential elements in a healthy Un- tomorrow. Monday slightly snow, the year will be held. Serge Proko-
iversity life but which are too fast with unsettled snow and probable fieff, Russian pianist and composer,i
deteriorating. snow. Not much change in snow. 'will present a program of his own
o* * * works. Obviously, the society is
In the meantime it is becoming holding to its plan of bringing men
more and more difficult to keep whose appearance would otherwise
Campus Opthat New Year's resolution of at- be impossible. Its courage is admir-
Contributors are asked to be brief, tending each and every class; and able; Ann Arbor people who make
confining themselves to- less than 300
words if possible. Anonymous com- with finals only two weeks away a practice of occasional musical
muxnications will be disregarded. Th.
nmes communicants will, hwever, things are coming to a pretty pass. tours to Detroit may well give it
be regarded as confidential, upon re- * * * consideration.
quest. Letters published should not be
construed as expresisng the editorial One of our best known geologyo
opinion of The Daily. professors had a hard time keep- COLUMBIA ISSUE.
ing his lecture students awake Fri- MOZART: Quintet in A Major forI
A FRESHMAN'S VIEW day morning. Might I remind him Clarinet and Strings; Charles Dra-
OF HELL WEEK that five people jammed into a per and the Lener String Quartet.
To the editor: telephone booth for 50 minutes --
There mutr have been some mis- would experience much the same This work was composed in the
sort of trouble keeping awake as year 1789 which conms at the close
take in the dummy editorial page we all did in that lecture? If we're of nine years' prodigious creative
of The Daily in the January 17th 'supposed to keep mentally awake activity during which time Mozart
issue. You must admonish your we need fresh air and plenty of it. composed nearly two hundred
makeup artists to be more careful * * * works and two years before his

(

of "V "
tl Iifi 31' i( i~t "S i

THlE LATEST PAPAl. IWULL
Highly anachronic and similarly
futile is the Pontiff's recent utter-
ance deploring the "pedagogic na-
turalism" of modern education
as administered by that so-called
usurper of the church's inalienable
right-the state. In two and a half
pages of newspaper copy, the Pope
develops with beautiful mediaeval
logic the view that youth, born
"in original sin," is delivered from
the pursuit of ultimate happiness
beyond life to the ephemeral and
naughty, practices of the world in
which we live by being made cog-
nizant of the forces of human na-
ture. Persons thus educated, he
holds, are bound to go the way of
all flesh at the expense of salva-
tion.

FIRST METHODIST
CHURCH
Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts,
Mm., Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, D. D.
Associate Minister, Rev. Samuel J.
Harrison Student Director, Mr.
Ralph Johnson. Mrs. Altura Win-
ters, Advisor of Women Students.
10:30 A. M.---Morning Worship.
"WHAT GOD HATH JOINED
TOGETHER," Dr. Arthur W.
Stalker..
12:00 M.-THREE DISCUSSION
CLASSES. Leaders: Prof.S. F.
Gingerrich, Prof.G.E. Carrothers,
and Mr. Ralph R. Johnson.
6:00 P. M.-WPESLEYAN GUILD
DEVOTIONAL MEETING.
7:30 P. M.-Wesleyan Guild 'Lec-'
ture at Hill Auditorium. Speaker:
The Rev. Dr. John Timothy Stone.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURGH
On East Huron, west of State
Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister
Howard R. Chapman, Minister for
Students.
9:45 A. M.-The Church School in
all departments meets. University
Students at Guild House. Mr.
Chapman in charge.
10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship.
Mr. Sayles will preach. "RE-
LIGION AS ADVENTURE."
5:30 P. M.-Friendship Hour for
Young People at Guild House.
6:30 P. M.-Au address by Mr. C.
W. Melick on "Shall we Support
the 18th Ainctidmenti"' Mr. Me-
lick has been connected with the
government law enforcement force.
BETHLEHEM
EVANGELICAL CHURCH
(m~vangelical Synod of N. A.)

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Huron and Division Sts.
Merle H. Anderson, Minister
Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwl,, Counsellor
for University W~omen.
10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship,
Rev. Forest E. Conser from Sangli,
India will speak.
12:0 N.--Sudimt Class. Teacher:
Prof. H.: Y. McClusky.
5:30 P. M.-Social Hour for Young
People.
6:30 P. M.-Young People's Meet.
ing. Children from the Hoover
Sunday Schodl will present a play.
TUNE IN!
Sunday Morning Service
DE-ROIT UNITY CENTER
br-adcmt frm
The Droit C vic Thmrs
1130 A.M. atern &aa Time.
1030 AM. Central Stand. ie
EVERY ThURSDAY V'G
(Beghinmg jen. 9. 19"0)
LECTURE ON PRINCIPLES
OF SUCCESSFUL LIVING
sag forsh the PtiaWs* a wsh
in mty unfold wihin his life the
Haith, Pete and prosgerity wh
11:05 P.M. Basern Stan. T mh.
10 05 P.M. Cent& Stand. Ti".

HILLEL FOUNDATION

615 E. University
7:30-Chapel in
League. Rabbi *A.

Dial 3779
the Michigan
H. Fink will

speak on Law and Lawlessness.
8:30-Open iIouse at the Founda.
tion. All are Welcome.
8:30-OPEN HOUSE.

---C-. -

IL.

t
:I
.,

for evidently they mixed the copy
of the editorial column and Toasted
Rolls. The material in the intend-
ed humor column was more sensi-

OnPe of the worst sensations I1
know of is to wake up suddenly to
find twenty or thirty pairs of eyes
turned my way as the gent next to
me says, "Hey, snap out of it!"

Despite the usual reverence
which attaches to papal encycicals
per se, this present educational
tract is so fringed with finely spun
theological webs on the one hand
and inimical arguments against
the primacy of the state over the
church on the other as to render
itself the product of "a voice howl-
ing in the wilderness."
On the side- of the "wilderness"
bounded by the controversy regard-
ing the original jurisdiction over
education of state or church is
Professor T. H. Briggs of Teacher's
college, Columbia, who upholds the
right of the state to educate. Dr.
Briggs' mere reminder of the evi-
dence which shows that children
are born "unmoral" is sufficient to,
discredit the doctrinal view that
they are born "in original sin,"
which the Pope uses as his initial
premise in demanding first privi-
leges in education for the church.
The Pontiff's other arguments for
the precedence of the church over

ble and serious than the editorial * * *
on "Hell Week" itself. Weather for Tuesday and Wed-
I was particularly amused by the , nesday: Gently shifting northerly
third paragraph in which the edi- snow, with snow -and snow.
torial writer vainly tried to excuse SCOOP!
the existence of the institution of Rolls is tickled to present the
"Hell Week" with the result that it I first showing of the talking movies
sounded pathetically like the, taken on campus during the early
naughty boy who, upon being pes- I part of the week.
tered for explanations, whines, "Oh, Here is the picture:
just because."
If such a week exists for the pur-
pose of making better college men r
out of the neophytes of this insti-
tution, such methods that are now - 0
employed in the ",,tter Collegian And here is the dialogue:
Course in One Week" are strangely "Bzzzzzzzzrk, squawwwk buzz
at odds with the usual trend of i buzzz k uk?
buzgaw?
character-improving lessons. To be Snizzzorrk. Wazzz pugggglly
a sufferer of embittering injustices,,kg
to fear to present oneself at one's wow.
fraternity house, to feel one's posi- 1*y * e*a
tion is insecure, to have a sense of I thought you'd like to see a pro-
inferiority indellibly ground into view of the picture so you'd know
one's temperament is a strange way what it was about. Some of the lo-
of building oneself into an upright- cal talkie contrivances are still in
eons, fearless college student. their infancy and can't even say
However, the most humorous sec- "Dada" yet*
tion of the editorial was the de- * * *
clartiontha "One ayear at The fella who wrote yesterday's
claration that, "Once a year, at
least, the older men in the house I Campus Opinion asking that
are reunited to one definite pur- vaudeville be brought back to town
pose." If taking advantage of a is our nomination for the world's
theoretically undefendable man, if champion Glutton for Punishment.
participating in barbarous frivoli- What do you think?
ties beneath the dignities of upper-
classmen, if a week of satanic con- Weather for Thursday and Fri-%

untimely death.
The circumstances of the writ-
ing have some bearing. He was ab-
solutely impoverished at the time,
thoroughly upset by the financiall
worries which were with him
throughout his life. The indomi-
table refinement and contented
passivity of his spirit is breaking
somewhat. His former moods of
gaiety give may to a more thought-
ful frame of mind. A hint of ro-
mantic melancholy creeps into the
music. The mournful, macabre ele-
ment in the tone-quality of thel
clarinet is too effectively and con-
sistently exploited for its use to be
coincident. Much of the writing for
the clarinet consists in minor com-
ments on themes in major mode
taken by violin. The third variation
in the last movement is unusually
mournful, significant by cqntrast
to the merry theme of which it is a
variation.
In fact, the work may be seize!
by musical historians who are
pleased to see in the later Mozart
anticipation of Beethoven. In a
sense, this is a romantic Mozart.
But only because there is less de-
tachment of feeling, less objecti-
vity. There is tle same satisfaction
with the contemporary idiom, the
same facility in his medium, th,
same clarity, the same articulate-
ness, the same divine simplicity and
purity of form that makes Mozart
the classical composer. Made sus-
ceptible by his temperament to the
'Italian vocal style, his thematic
bears its traces.
The clarinet of Charles Draper is
known in England and on the con-
tinent as one of the most beautiful
instruments of the day. Ard Co-
lumbia is doing this country a ser-
vice in bringing it to Anrica in
such good company as the Lener
Quartet. This combination also re-
cords the other outstanding corn-
position for clarinet and strings,:

Fourth Ave. between Packard
William
Rev. Theodore R. Schtnale
9:00 A. M,-Bihle School,

and

FIRST CONORiGWATIONAL
State and William
Allison Ray Heaps, Minister
10:45 A. M.-Sermon by Mr. Heaps.
Subject: "Self-Knowledge,'' the
first Ai a series on. ' "Paths to
Powr,.
5:30 P. N.--Student Fellowship
Supper followed by our illustrated
talk on "''hc Grand Canyon" by
Mr. Heaps.
ST. ANDREW'S
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Division and Catherine Sts.
Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector
Rev- I. L. Harris, Assistant
8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion.
9:30 A. M.---Holy Comnam unin.
(Student chapel in H Oarrs Hall.)
9:30 A. M.-Church School, (Kin.
dergarten meets at 11 o'clock.)
11:00 A. M.---Morning Prayer; ser-
mon by Rev. Samuel S. Drury, D.
D., Headmastcr of St. Paul's
School
6:30 P". M.--Student Supper in
Harris Hall; talk by Rev. Samuel
S. Drury, D.D.
7:45 P, M.-Evening Prayer; ad.
dress by Mr. Lewis.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
Third and West Liberty Sts.
C. A. Brauer, Pastor
9:00 A. M.-German.
10:00 A M.F; -Bble Sr,4.,

I

BE CONSISTENT
IN YOUR RELIGION
ATTEND CHURCI

;

i
l
l

r

10:00 A.

M.-Morning Worship.11

REGULARLY

Sermon: "Active Faith."

0

Ii

11:00 A. M.-German Service.
7:00 P. M--Young People's League,

duct on the part of the infalliblef

the state in pedagogy is that the sophomores, juniors and seniors are
church -is the more perfect society, the only methods and means by
"because it contains all the means which a fraternity is held together,
necessary to its end, which is the the primary purpose of fraternity
eternal salvation of men." It would life is a ridiculous farce. If upper-
be a silly display to enumerate classmen can only have the broth-
herewith the obvious forces of con- erly feeling imbedded in them by
temporary life which show this merciless dominance of helpless in-
contention to be rather a niece of dividuals. they are laughing at

day: snowh iurries and probably
snow.
** *
And now our fair coeds are hav-
ing shooting contests. Form your
conclusions. Personally, I'm going
to watch my step.
* * ~*
Note to Lonesome Coed: Are you
really sore at me? I'm beginning,

ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
Washington. St. at Fifth Ave.

E. C. Stelihorn, Pastor
10:30 A. M.-Morning Service with
SCAmlol.

FIRST CIIURCII
CHRIST, SCIENTISF
409 S. D~ivisig St.
10:30 A. M.-Regular Morning Serv-
ice. Sermon topic. "tLIFE."
11:45 A. M.-Sunday School follow-I
ing the morning service.

I

11

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