PAEFOtm THE MICHICAN AlLY' ' .r, P$B[TAftY 20, 1036 .: .. . .. .. . _ . .. _ _, .. . _ . . .. _ _ _.. Published every morning except MondayI during the TJniversity 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 credited to it or not otherwise credited' Inrthis paper and the local news published herein'. Entered at the postofice at Ann Arbor, ?ficligan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscripfion by carrier, $4.08; by mail, $4. 0 ofices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones:.Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 *MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman.....1....George C., Tilley City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg News Editor.............Donald J. Kline Sports Editor.....Edward L. Warner, Jr. Womnen's 'Editor......... Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editor.........Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama.......William J. Gorman Literary Editor.......... Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City l ditor.... Robert J. Feldran Night Edjtors-Editorial Board Members Frank ~. Cooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kaifiman Walter W. Wilds Gurney Williams Reporters Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen- Bare David M. Nichol Maxwell Bauer William Page Mary L. Behymer Howard H. Peckhamr Benjamin 14. Berentsonilugh Pierce Allan H. Berkman Victor Rabinowitz Arthur 3. Berntein John D. Reindel S. Beach Conger Jeannie Roberts Thomas M. Cooley Joseph A. Russell J ohn H. Denler Joseph Ruwitch Helen Domine William P. Salzarulo Margaret Eckels Charles R. Sprowl Kathearine Ferrin Adsit Stewart Carl F. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanson Sheldon C. Fullerton lane Thayer Ruth Geddes Margaret Thompson Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin jackvGoldsmith Elizabeth Valentine orris Croverman Harold O. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustii, Charles White Margaret Harris G. Lionel Willens David B. Hempstead John I. Willoughby$ S . Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise ean Levy Barbara Wright ussell E. McCracken Vivian Zimit Dorothy Magee BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. r Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers y Advertising.......... .T. Hollister Mabley Advertising............K asper H. Halverson Advertising.............Sher wood A. Upton Service..................George A. Spater Circulation ............... Vernor Davis Accounts....... ...... .....John R. Rose, Publications (.eorge R. Hamtlton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker James E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey Robert Crawford Thomas Muir Harry B. Culver George R. Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford Norman Eliezer Lee Slayton genes Hloffer Joseph Van Riper Norris Johnson Robert Williamson Charles Kline William R. Worboy Dorothy Bloomgardner Alice McCilly Laura Codling Sylvia Miller Agnes Davis Helen E. Musselwhite Bernice Glaser Eleanor Walkinshaw Hortense Gooding .Dorothea Waterman. ic achievement and a hesitating step toward international amity. Our Senate will shortly consider a proposal that we join the World Court, albiet with plenty of reser- vations designed to reassure the. old guard who will still prickle de- liciously with 1919 gooseflesh when- ever Europe is mentioned. The country as a whole is sev- eral jumps ahead of our political machinery in shedding suspicions< of European motives. We have re- sumed economic relations despite diplomatic hesitations, and we have accepted personal relation- ships with foreigners as a matter of course. This University has felt no distrust of scholars from abroad. If "European entanglements" were{ still a., live issue outside of Wash- ington, Michigan's law against. alien teachers would never have become a read-letter in need of resurrection by the Attorney Gen-1 eral, - 0- EXTRETE FUTILITY. In October of last year The Daily took exception to the continued existence of the Interfraternity council in its present state of utter impuissance and suggested that it either disband or frame for itself a constitution conferring specific powers and duties beyond the mere right to compose resolutions. The impotence of the Interfra-! ternity council, however, is not wholly attributable to the student lack of courage and perseverance. Occasionally they rise from their lethargy to protest some action of these faculty officers, but their in- dignation falls on deaf ears andl they relapse into spinelessness. The deans' office, which now dic-1 tates to that body, seems pleasedI with its dominance and scarcely inclined to relinquish it. In dis- ciplinary circles fraternities are regarded with considerable suspi- cion as potential breeders of sin, and anything approaching self-I regulation and self-discipline forI them is looked upon with extreme disfavor. The deans' task of keep- ing the Interfraternity council well in hand is rendered easy by the transient nature of its member- ship and the consequent impossi- bility of. its executing any adequate policy of rehabilitation. Again, therefore, we call atten- tion to the farce and futility of the way in which it annually goes through the motions of self-gov- ernment, and urge its disband-I ment. - o---- Aic)RLL I MANY HAPPY RETURNS. Have all your little postcards bounced back with your grades, i or are you one of those people who l wait for the Recorder's message and take the whole thing at one gulp?c * * *t I put my eggs in different bas-c kets and they're all back now, soc I'm not worrying about the Re-1 corder's, office. One egg has a1 crack in it but it'll get by'. c This isn't an About Books col- umn just because I mention "ap- pendix" but they removed mine last Wednesday and I must talk' about my operation even if nobody' listens. I'm writing this with burnt matches on newspaper margins 1 and lying flat on my back in the' University hospital, so you can see how, hard I try to please you, if any. * * * Sinfce last Tuesday I've been liv- ing on orange juice and tea. If I ever see another glass of orange juice I'm going to mail a choice bomb to every orange grower in California and Florida, and when I get to Japan I'm going to put bugs in the tea plants. . * * * A hospital is a tough place for a college student to get used to. They wake you up at 6:30 a.m. and you l stay awake, willy nilly. Every time you think you're going to sneak a nap somebody comes in and takes your temperature or gives you a bath or something. And in between times you drink orange juice. That expression about it being a long time between drinks is the bunk. * * * This institution, they say, cost $5,000,000. I don't know about that but I do know that they have million dollar nurses here. Whoops for Hornaday, Sohoon, Mills, New- haus and all the others! If you think I'm going to leave until they kick me out you're still dizzy from the J-1{op Which conveniently recalls Fri- day night. I had a radio brought up here so I could hear the J-Hop music and the cheering of the 1500 (ha, ha, ha, ha, ha) carefree stu- dents in the throes of the great Intramural event, but the net re- sults were enough to make me want to sign up for Economics or do something else just as crazy. * * *I The thing that gripes me most is the fact that at 8 o'clock Friday night I was given a couple of pills to make me sleep and I deliberately fought off their effects in order to hear the broadcast at 11:30. S.* * Just as I turned on the set at that time the boys in the X-ray de- partment here turned on every- thing they had and the noise that came from the loudspeaker sound- ed exactly like a rusty buzz saw (with nine teeth missing) going through tin. * * * On top of that the actual pro- gram sounded something like this: "The president of the Michigan Mutual Automobile Casualty In- surancy Policy company is pleased! to present Ted Weems and Fletchert Henderson in a two-hour program of glorious entertainment." . (Half a bar of music-probably by mistake.) . . . . "Now I want to try to describe the decorations, but first the president of the Michigan' Mutual Liability Automobile Casu- alty Insurance Policy company hopes you are enjoying this mar- velous program. Fletcher Hender- son will{ now play 'Tiger Rag'." (Ten Weems plays 'Here We Are.') . "This program is coming to you as a gift of the president of the Michigan Mutual --" (Here II turned off the set and partially re- gained control of my reeling senses. What I got out of the ether Friday night was worse than the ether on Wednesday). * * * However from all reports I guess I heard about as much of the J- Hop music as the dancers them- selves did. What they need for that function is a band of 285 men,; with loud speaker attachments. * * * I see by the J-Hop Extra that one of the girls wore "jade slip- pery." She must have had a hard time kennina it on. Mw ic And Drama RECENT COLUMBIA ISSUES.I MENDELSSOHN: Symphony No. 3 in A Minor (Scotch Symphony); by Felix Weingartner and RoyalI Philharmonic Orchestra; Set No. 126. ____ z TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of ma- chines. Our equip- ment and person- nel are considered among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. Q. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 Here it is in Weingartner, the great Viennese conductor, displaying the same ad- mirable intelligence that charac- terize his Beethoven recordings for Columbia,- goes perhaps the most f considerable way towards making: this symphony acceptable contem- porarteously. He has done very cleverly by recognizing and ex- ploiting the scherzo impulse that was undoubtedly Mendelssohn'sj most genuine musical gift.S The last movement is the most STATE obvious example of this. It wasE written as a warlike movement; we are supposed to "sense the irresis- tible tread of marching feet as the clans gather for war." Weingart- ner, recognizing the essential nai- vete of the writing and realizing Now we have that no battle written so simply and unpretentiously in the classi- cal idiom would get anything but a spi wth laughing reception after Strauss's battle in Heldenleben, "scherzoizes" the movement. He makes no futileug attempt to make it warlike by sheer sonority but plays it lightly and everyone and graciously, mal hg the move- ment something like a pleasing has the desire feminine comment on that, gay! thing war. for delightful This tampering with a composi- tion in the interests of somehow I establishing contemporaneity of il . appeal is ordinarily a dangerous thing for a conductor to do. Pur- ists will howl to preserve musical °' history intact. But here Weingart ner is both justified and successful. The clarity, grace and simplicity LUNCHEONS of Mendelssohn's orchestration PP FWttIEA ~.ooCO.tY The most popular ready-to- eat cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They 'Include ALL-BRAN, Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krumbles, and Kellogg's Shredded Whole Wheat Biscuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee -the coffee that lets you sleep. PEP BRAN FLAKES BETTER BRAN FLAKES TRY Kellogg's Pep Bran Flake to- morrow. Each crisp, delicious spoon. ful gives you the concentrated nour- ishment of health-building wheat- energy to keep you wide awake in classes, pep to keep you on your toes throughout the afternoon's athletics. Just enough bran to be mildly laxative. Ask that Kellogg's Pep Bran Flakes be served at your fraternity house or favorite campus restaurant. They're great with fruit or honey added. N D b. gill fI it Spring, are. here 11, Ii il Editorial Comment Night Editor-WM. C. GENTRY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1930 A FUTILE RULE. OUTGROWN JINGOISM. An interesting bit of antiquarian legal research conducted by Attor ney-General Brucker has brough to light a law passed oy the state legislature in 1919 to the effect tha no aliens may be employed a teachers in state institutions. The discovery is a bit disconcerting The contracts of not a few aliens now members of the University faculties are technically voidable as made contrary to law, and thus a convenient lever is provided an one who might wish to pry away from Michigan those teachers who have not surrendered their foreign citizenship. . This unfortunate application of the; law, which obviously was not considered by its makers, may prove distinctly embarassing. to the University. It would be better if Attorney General Brucker had left this peculiar reminder of our post-war jingoism the legal dead- letter that it has been for the past decade. Today the law appears ridiculous. When it was passed the country had not yet recovered from the shell-shock of the Great War, and the names of the Central Powers were still household by-words for barbarous cruelty and menacing domineerance. It was unthinkable that any one who claimed sympa- thy with, or even birth in one of these nations should be so placed that he might contaminate the pure patriotism of American youth. Then also came "splendid isola-' Lion" and the horror of "Europeanj entanglements" which served well as catchwards upon which to hang the 1919 presidential campaign, and the Michigan legislature, al- ways loyal to the party then seek- ing power, echoed the stump bally- hoo with an appropriate law against alien teachers. Today the intense and jealous consciousness of nationalism which swept over the world in 1919 is be- ing outgrown. The familiar cries of "Egypt for the Egyptians," "Tur- key for the Turks" and even (Grand Rapids Press) Former President Little of the University of Michigan brought. - Prof. Peter M. Jack from Europe to head the new department of t rhetoric and English at Ann Arbor, e placing him cver the heads of t many who had long served on the S department's faculty. Several resig- e nations followed, ands it now de- , velops that a state law of 1919 for- s bade the employment of any alien Y as a regular member of the univer- e sity staff. s The objection to appointing Jack Y would be the same, from the stand- Y point of slighted professors in the o department, whether he came from 1 Glasgow or from South Bend. Dr. Little's chief mistake, if it existed, f was in going over the heads of t faithful university scholars for an . outsider. Sometimes any admin- istratior, facing a dearth of real r administrative material, has to do that. As for the 1919 law, it is ridi- culous. If a Robert M. Wenley can be at- tracted to the university from Scotland, to make a profound and lasting impression upon students for generations, he should not be barred pending naturalization; in fact, he should not be barred at all. Philosophy is of all nations and all ages, and the university should be able to draw upon the world's best minds for its instructors. To have forced Arthur Edward Boak, pro- fesor of ancient history, to wait four years for naturalization would . probably have been simply , to de-t prive the university of his services -the services of a man who was to hold the commission of lieutenant- commander of the American navy during the war. And if a Rene Talamon or Michael Pargment can teach the romance languages to university students better than a man who has spent his life in this country, what difference does itt make where he was born? There are ways of eveding theV law of 1919, making aliens "irregu- lar" members of the faculty and special lecturers on private alumnio 1 pay pending their naturalization.p 1 13ut that hotlm h irnarcca- , t (makes.the score easy and flexible under the composer's interpreta- tion. As reflection of intelligence in the conductor, the set is quite: interesting. There are no notice- able flaws in reproduction. * * * ALBENIZ: Iberia: Suite for Or- chestra by E. Fernandez Arbos and the Madrid Symphony Orchestra: Set No. 130. Four of the numberstfrom Al-: beniz's great piano suite, orches- trated at his own request and with his own co-operation by his friend Fernandez Arbos, are here present- ed under the arranger's baton. The attempt at orchestraizing orchestral piano music always proves a valuable study in the re- spective values of the two mediums. Another interesting example of the same thing is the Victor recording of Balakireff's Islamey by the Hol- lywood Bowl orchestra. The pian- istic impossibility of many of the numbers in the Iberia suite, the over-elaboration, the superfluity of restless counterpart have given rise to the general criticism of the piano numbers as orchestral sketches in disguise. Albeniz him- self finally admitted that the re- sources of orchestral arrangement might more properly develop the rich coloring and startling har- monies. He himself Attempted orchestrating two of the move- ments but passed the assignment over to his friend Arbos, whose ar- rangements are played here. It is impossible to predict reac- tions to the orchestration. Arbos' arrangement has interesting style of it own; occasionally it seems in- adequate to the original score in the sense of improper valuation of rhythmic and harmonic figures. Some of the coloring, notably in Triana, is startling and annoying; the annoyance in all probability due to prejudiced perception. The orchestra plays with brilliant verve, marred only by occasional uncer- tainty in the climaxes. GRIEG: Sonata in C Minor for Violin and Piano, Op. 45: Toscha Seidel and Arthur Loesser. A certain symphony with the Northern tone-poet is necessary to carry one over the unmistakable flaws in conception and construc- tion. There is the Northern fla- vor-a wild, turgid sort of pathos- that one may relish. Grieg often, as here, succeeds in communicat- ing despite technical infelicity. His "short breath" is noticeable; the 'themes are nervousdrhythmic phrases clipped from dance mod- els. Progression is accomplished by naive transposition of thematic phrases to other keys. Pitch dis- placement is his only method of developing a theme. Such motion as there is is a certain vigorous dancing sort of motion. Grieg hadn't the intellectual grasp to succeed in the larger forms. Yet,: SANDWICHES SPECIALTIES I1 I xI Want Ads Pay f1 ' "'I i I M .'tie:=.. fR- _ r .._. _ _ _.. ._.. ._ ..... , ... - - -. rrw.. wiwwwA+r $4O mm$45 Bob Carson's Music I with extra trousers W G dR&C4OMPPM ,for, Mfen c ZSLYnce 1 &4 ~ Removing mental barriers In the Bell Telephone System men are constantly studying new ways to make the customer's dealings with the company easy and pleasant. The new "counter- less" idea, now being introduced in the telephone company's business offices, is a case in point. Here the customer is placed at once on a friehly personal basis ith the company representative. He is invited to sit down comfortably and discuss his business. Cer- tainly more satisfactory than standing at a counter. This single instance represents a point of view which telephone men think is im- portant. Telephone service calls for engi- neering skill and more-it needs human understanding. BELL SYSTEM ?' - _ - 4..", . + 4 j f1iioIt- Ult l jvi lem o ttlttY-efinoorfr' ir tilsA