THE MICHIGAN DAILY .r w f Stjotn At all in keeping with the high name 18tlliand standards previously preserved L Music And Dra n ublishd every morning except Monday by the institution, and their actions l : ig the TUniversity year by the Board in sadrsprvo' eee T0 ttol of Student Publications. , in the affair should be instrumen- , ROLL D emer of Western Gonference t tal in bringing about a much need- WELCOM1E,.BRAHMS' THIRD QUARTET t ocation. ed readjustment. '. SPRING j he Associated Press is exclusively entitled The only mistake the treasurer i Well, COME! BRAHMS: Quartet in B Flat, Op. the use for republication of all news dis. made in explaining his actions was 67: by Lener String Quartet: Co- thes pedi ead to t or tl nerwisecied that his entire argument should Yesterday, according to the cal- lumbia Masterworks Set No. 132. dn. have been based on the fact that endar, was the first day of spring. O ?ntered at the postofe at Ann Arbor, Harvard scrubwomen should be There was no column to herald itsn tt higan, assecond-lassatter. pal rate willing to work for nothing. The arrival because I sat home all day phony and at the height of the postage granted L~y Third Assistant Post-wilntowrfonohg.BamsW ne cnrvryhs ter General.1 prestige connected with scrubbing with my feet in a tub of hot waterBr m-gner controversythis ubscripsion by carrier, $4.05; by mall, real Harvard marble certainly must and ate aspirin tablets. quartet was disconcerting to the Rice: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- be worth far more than two cents ;Brahmins. Its reputation has been d Street.1BrhisItreuainhsbn1 hones: Editorial, 492s; n, 4. an hour. __ ___If this is spring I'm glad winter's unfortunately somewhat uncritic- EDITORIAL STAFF i over. ally handed down. Restoration in I Telephone 4925 THE MOTE IN OTTAWA'S EYE. AN I D Othe form of the Lener's splendid MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY The fiery words of MacKenzie performance is valuable. King, Canadian prime minister, YEAH. The work is certainly uncharac- itoria~Thelworkmis certainly uncharac-lle q Editor... .........Pierce R rrnhati the paiiament ofrour Dear Joe: Now that spring is of- teristic and surprisingly modern in wrs Editor-........Dnard . rne serrpulc obar.epoto rts Editor........EdwardJ1L. Warner, Jr. ficially here why don't the B. & G- technique. It represents Brahms men's Editor............Marjorie Folrmer liquor to this country. A bloody boys start the drinking fountain egraph Editor.......Cassam A. Wilson war no less was the dire prospect stimulating himself in the medium. sic and Drama........william J. Gorman on the diagonal so the geology stu-E isart ittyrciKtloeri.n.h.l.doet b. elnKing if such ex dents can study ice formations? employing what is known as strict- I i ht Editors-Editorial Board Member, port should continue. The Beachcomber. ly technical expression. In concep- nk E. Cooper Hlenry T. Merry We suspect Mr. King of alarm- .ham C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss . 1, i tion (that is as a skeleton of sig- rles R. 1anman Waler W. Wilde !ism; we also suspect that he has Gurney Williams Wlen gfEnificant thematic material with ant rr Bktn fhbeen listening to men of the Sena- dAMe mnt) m ! f, i NOTICE! The rigni =i :,,-(1i> the only local author- ized, licenscd and bonded agent for all trans-At lanti~c, ran s- Pci fic and other ocean gen cm sGreat L akes passenger Steamshi;) Lines. .lsoAmerican Travel Dept., T . .Coa l&;on,4STCA, and all other ,tr ,or roiss. 1 will arrange your lt complete. -on any steamer, tour or cr uis audveriisedl or soldi anywhere, in any class, at tariff ra~tes. No extra charge ever. V'isacs iprocured for clients .Air- plane, H1ot el -an(] l':asion flay reservatioos made. A few ornanizers for tours wanted. to per cent cofltnalsSion paid. KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU box E. Huron St. Phone 6;4 x 10 Days Left To Name Our Place For The $25 Prize We wish to announce that on Monday we wil ._..o._.... . _..... w. . i { i start a Night Delivery Western Union Service. Service. Also Night SAWYLII'S A'A Ask your dealer to show you the very let- est style in wet-weather ,. larments. TheSawyer"Forain" Zephyr-weight Rain coat was de' nod for college meanswomen. Thisnew model,style No. 520, is made of bal- loon cloth~waterproofed by Sawyer's famous process and combines $reatesL strength with zephyr -weight l1t- ness. This cost wttiihs only 20 ounces. A treat karmnt for sunmer wear. ,H. M. SAWYER & SON East Cambridge .:: :: Mass. I Special Sunday Dinner . Regular Noon Luncheon 7 9...,, t1nn * EacL 0 ,na . i.uJu 500 Regular Evening (full course) Dinners 60c (Except Sunday) OPEN ALL NITE L. C.CLAYTON torris Alexander. Bruce J Manley letrain Askwith Lester May :elea Bare, M:rgaret Mi aXwell Bauer David If. Nichol ary L. Tehymer William rage tlan H. Berkman Howard H. Peckham 1 hI rgh Pierce rthur . Bernstein Victor Rabinowitz .peach Conger Jhin D. Reindel ho asA. Cooley Jeannie Roberts elen Domine Joseph A. Russell [argaret Eckes oseph Ruwitch atherine Ferrin Ralph R. Sachs arl . Forsthe Cecelia Sriver beldon C. Fullerton Charles R. sprowl uth Gallmeyer Adsit Stewart uth Geddes S. Cadwell Swanson inevra Ginn Jane Thayer Goldsmith lara ret Thompson iily Grimes Richard L. Tobi orris Gove.ian Robert Townsend ar aret Harris Elizabeth Valentine SCullenKennedy Harold . Warren, Jr. eats Levy C . Lionel Willens t ussel E. McCracken arbara Wright orothy Magee Vivian Zimit BUSINESS STAFF; Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER ; Department Managers dvertising... ........T Hollister Mabley dvertising.........Kasper 11. Halverson dvertisnug .. ....- terwood A. Upton ervce...................eorge A.S eater irculation..............J. Vernor Davis .conts.. ........ .. .......John R. Rose "ublications. ......eorge R. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assitants yrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker ames E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey obert Crawford Thomas Muir [arry B. Culver George R. Patterson homas M. Davis Charles Sanford 'orman Eliezer Lee Slavyon gries Roffer Joseph VanRipe oris Johnson Robert Williamson harles Kline William R. Worboy orothy Uloomgardner Alice McCully aura Co ing Sylvia Miller gnes Davis Helen F. Musselwite 1 unice Glaser Eleanor Walkinshaw :ortense Gooding Dorothea waterman SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1930 Night Editor-WM. C. GENTRY "TRADITION FADES." Professor Claude Halstead Van 'yne, who will always be remem- ered for his love of truth and his ontempt for shady chauviniistic naceuracies, never, even when his distorical research made revolu Ionary disclosures, assumed the .ttitude. of objectionable iconocl- ism. He was the perfect scholar nd always the perfect gentleman. [is painstaking approach to his pecial field, American history, rhich has accomplished more than ny other factor, to formulate our resent and changed attitude to- 'ard the early history of our na- on, was ever tempered; with ia Alm surety that made it so readily ld happily acceptable. And so Michigan, in losing this nest of professorial personalities, ears the double loss of the scholar rd gentleman. Always, however, ill remain the written result of Ls books. His last published work, The War for American Indepen- mnce: American Phase," has been iternaltionally acclaimed as the tilon's finest contribution to his-. rical writing. And as the in-. :ription over the William Clements Ibrary attests, "Tradition fades, it the written record remains for- er fresh." WHY THEY HAVE IT. tnr Rrnnlrhnrt. .lRmPr1IPv HilTlar IW i i vi.a'Y'w Y1 AtTYI'R'Y"r:11TIT[Y j Lar mulyIKnai tUomemey nuui3 im, .IMPROVEMENTS. f and to experts on prohibition from Topeka and Wichita. His measure Dear Joe: Which side are you would seem to be prompted by so- on in this War of the Campus. Youi licitude for the United States, not gotta choose sides. The trenches for Canada. are all dug, now; if you don't be-' Canada is losing a fifteen million r lieve it, just go look. Are you east dollar business; United States citi- side or west side or both sides zens will spend this money for against the middle?' The way the much worse and, probably more gang has dug itself in it looks as poisonous liquor of home manu- though they'll be fighting it out on facture. Canadian citizens will that line if it takes all summer. have to submit to an irritating Capand Anchor. ! V ---..-G: ulic ua , flut b of Brahms' movements would seem more important then they turn out' to be; it being a truism that he was not primarily susceptible to the quality of the medium. That is not the case with the third quartet. Expression is secured almost en- tirely in the execution, through texture-a sort of Hart Crane pro- cedure. An nold rrvinnin lad thm 611 East William Phone 23501 i'" mmmm READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! I border espionage, also costly, to n upruncia Qance-Lee J bolster up the feeble enforcement childlike in character, is used as a efforts of our beleagured dry pa- 1 WRESTLING EXPENSES. generating theme of first move- trol. ment-which shows anything but For some time the United States From a wrestling story on the respect for the classical conception government has been urging such Sports page: "145 pound class - of the sonata-movement as essen- a measure, as a friendly gesture, on Bishop defeated M. Jones, fall 4:10; tially dramatic in character. Only Canada. Yet barely two per cent Stalker defeated Hormer, fall $3:00." a tour de force could swing a hu- } ' morous theme into dramatic ac- of the liquor consumed in this I thms draonis im- country is of Canadian manufac- l ion; so Brahms draws on his im- cure. Washington, it would seem, Imense talent for fascinating intri- might well pick the beam out of cate counterpoint and clever the- I miht wll ick he bam ut o '3 matic transformation to produce a' its own eye before attempting to tu rangmintestd a pick the mate out of Ottawa's.(( texture drawing interested, analy- o-- . tical attention to itself, apart from --0--its significance. -t F fThe history of transformation in Campus Opinion Brahms' pianoforte quintet, Op. 34! sfirst written for five strings, then' Contributors are aIsked(1to he brief, Confining thecmselve(s to less than 300 for two pianos) and the number of wor's of possible. Anonymous com- "Come on, Stalker; just two nanications will he disregarded. The ,,, worksfor quintets and sextets, to- names of communicants will, however, bits more and you'li have him" gether with the fact that Brahms he regarded as confidential, upon re- is known to have destroyed a quest. Letters pud shed shimld not he a num- constrned as e pressiug the editorial BULLETIN. ber of quartets, would suggest that' S opinion of The Daily. - The two robins that were over- Brahms had difficulty in reduc- THEATRE TASTE. come by chilblains and double ing his massive harmonies and pneumonia Tuesday are getting plyphony to four string combina- To the Editor: along nicely, thanks. I find that tion. But there is no hint of it It will surely strike a portion of their conditions are not as serious here. Brahms doesn't hesitate to this grave town as amusing that we as first reported. Each one had give the orchestral illusion by ex- of all people should rush to the de- one pneumonia, which accounts cessive use of double-stopping and fense of a Junior Girls' play, which for the double report. a syncopated bass accompaniment. Mr. Gorman's splendid and schol- But these passages are adequately; arly criticism has just censored. , *varied with Mozartean purity and Possibly as the founder of his Mu- economy of instrumentation. The' sic and Drama column I may be SCOOP! quartet is anything but orthodox Spardoned-doubtless such a paren- . Donal Hamilton Haines, local (hence its disconcerting character tage is already marked against us journalism mogul, confessed late during the controversy); but it 'is in heaven!-and certainly in the yesterday that he is responsible for one of the most interesting things fresE. das o ason Cowles and Gthe weather! "It's all my fault," Brahms wrote for its revelation of 'D. E.. there were times when my hesaelrmbhn h aso his actual writing ability. own reviews could make Mr. Gor- his cell. "I went down to the In- The extraordinary vigour and man's seem very fulsome praise. tramural building Monday and re- variety in the style of the Lener or- But has not Mr. Gorman, in ad- moved all my stuff i preparation ganization are particularly appro- dition to an astonishing impervi- for the spring weather. And Sun- ! priate to this type of writing; it ousness to the rather rare beauty day I played tennis outdoors in my gives them a legitimate chance toj of the ladies of the ensemble, over- shirt sleeves." A police guard has reveal their art. They deserve looked the outstanding virtue of been thyown around the jail to dis- credit too for successfully disguis- the traditional Junior Girls' play.pel all lynching parties. ing the probably too unorthodox particularly the present edition of prominence of the viola in the' "State Street." Is it not the infec- IT'S JUST BUSINESS. scherzo movement. tious sense of the theatre, the dis- D a J Ha y u__d h arigadvr mr es f Dear Joe: Have you noticed the 0 Arming and very smart sense of irony of a local ad - "On your THE MYRTLE ROSS PLAYERSJ gaiety that permeates the produc- birthday send? your Mother flow- ters"? Maybe it's supposed to be a- A Commentf This must not be taken as a consolation prize. I criticism of the many fine student' Is this worth more than a Tink- In a charming curtan speech, performances in recent seasons, er's damn? Miss Ross described Ann Arbor as for I have personally been able to Ecila. "virgin territory to which she was see no more than three campus 'particularly happy to introduce productions in the last four years. Tch, tch, Alice; I never even some of the minor classics." She However, one can sense immedi- opened my mouth! next cited her opinion (shared by ately the rather alarming lack of , , the rest of the cast she added) thatI a clever or careful selection of "'Meet the Wife" (the play they plays. On the one hand careful, CORRECT. are playing this week and unques expert direction is lavished on the tionably a very bad farce) "wast Dear Joe: Average contents of a one of the most brilliant high so-i cheapest of the common successes;'{ of buesue, th s a dis- student pocket about this time of cial comedies ever written." The astrus tndeny, amostt te yar-Michiganensian receipt, sen-! minor classics for the ne~xt two astrous tendency, almost to the ior class receipt, Michigan Daily re- I weeks were then announced: The point present the ceipt, senior announcement receipt, J Family Upstairs and Abie's Irish most impassibly ambitious and ! mtr imibly amitioutand Intramural building locker receipt, 1Rose. The implications of such a tragic. In two recent productions receipted last year's house bill. speech should have been quite re one old fla lack of the three used stamps, slightly mouldy sufficient to maintain the virginity1 theatre sense and taste I mean. calling card. Only thing I missed of this territory as far as the in- Gordon Craig has put it much I are keys to the campus and a re- telliet portinof it.is cncerned-' ,_eligent,-p-rt-on - f. t ,s-c. nc-r-ed _ * S-R~IND'AO M11,11 I -.1- ' 11 Till , , FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, D.D., Min- ister; Rev. Samuel J. Harrison, B.D., Associate Minister; Mr. Ralph R Johnson, Student Di- rector; Mrs. Ellura Winters, Ad- visor to Women Students. 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship., Series I: "IT IS MORE BLESSED TO RECEIVE." Dr. Stalker. 12:00 M-Three Discussion Groups. Leaders: Miss Ellen \W. Moore, Prof. Geo. E. Carrothers, and Mr. Ralph R. Johnson. 6:00 P. M.-Wesleyan Guild Devo- tional Meeting. Prof. John R. Brumm, Leader. Subject: "VAL- UES." 8:00 P. M.-Convocation at Hill Auditorium. Wesleyan Guild Lee. turer, Rabbi Leo Franklin, Detroit. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH On East Huron, below State Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister Howard R. Chapman, Minister for Students. 9:45 A. M.-Church Bible School. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH H."ron and Division Sts. Merle H. Anderson, %Iinister Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwell, Counsellor for University Women. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "Handling God's Things." 12:00 Noon-Student Class Prof. H. Y. McClusky, teacher. 5:30 P. M.-Social Hour for Young People. 6:30 P. M.-Young People's Meet. ing. Peter Soudah from Syria speaker. TUNE IN! Sunday Morning Servic of s DrTROT UNITY CENTER br^ deaxt from The Detroit Civic Theao& 11:30A.M. Eastern Stand- Tim. 10:30 A.M. Central Stand. Tim. HILLEL FOUNDATION 615 E. University Dial 3779 8:00 P. M.-Student Convocation in Hill Auditorium. Dr. Leo M. Franklin will speak. There will be no Hillel Foundation services, for this reason. 9:00 P. M.-Open House Foundation. at the 10:45 A. M.-Morning Sermon by Mr. Sayles, Words of Jesus." Worship. "The Last i 9:45 A. M.-University Class meets at Guild House. 5:30 P. M.-Friendship Hour. 6:30 P. M.-The Usual Devotional Meeting. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH (Evangelical Synod of N. A.) Fourth Ave. between Packard and William Rev. Theodore R. Schnale WJR Detroit EVERYTHIURSJ)AY EV"G (Beginning Jan. 9, 1930) LECTURE ON PRINCIPLES OF SUCCESSFUL LIVING FIRST CONGREGATIONAL State and William Rev. Allison Ray Heaps, Minister 10:45 A. M.-Sermon by the Min. ister. 5:30 P. M.--Student Fellowship. 6:00 P. M.-Fellowship Supper. 6:30 P. M.-Prof. Stuart A. Courtis, P.H.D., will give an illustrated lecture on "A Scientific Approach to Religion." Seting forth the Principles by which sman may unfold within his life the Heath, Peace and Prosperity whih ' God has provided. 11:05 P.M. EasternStand. Tim* 10:05 P.M. Central Stand- Tim ll ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division and Catherine .Sts. Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Rev. T. L. Harris, Assistant i 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. BE CONSISTENT IN YOUR RELIGION ATTEND CHURCH REGULARLY 10:00 A. Sermon Question M.-Morning topic: "The as to Motive." Worship. Master's When the issue of rd scrubwomen two c our or firing them he university becaus husetts minimum w on objected to the ent wage scale, the tded to fire the wor aturally, the sons+ hater were enragedt f issuing an open le lumni revealing wha d to be the facts. The letter was clea isconcepti'ons and ere taken up which iterests of the unive Dncerned should nev nought out in any onal manner. That self open to censure nnot, however, bec When paying the 20 paying Harv- cents more an 11:00 A. M.--German Service. 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion, 9:30 A. M.-Holy Communion. (Student chapel in Harris Hall.) 9:30 A. M.-Church School. (Kindergarten meets at 11 o'clock.) 10:00 A. M.--Adult Class led by Miss Gammack. (In the church.) 11;00 A. M.-Morning Prayer; ser- mon by Mr. Lewis, 6:30 P. M.-Student supper in. Harris Hall, followed by two study groups led by Mr. Harris and Miss Gammack. 7:45 P. M.-Evening Prayer; ad- dress by Mr. Lewis. 11 lCame before better when he says, 'One of the ceipt for chocolate layer cake. came before e the Massa- unfortunate things in the modern Bobbie. 'age commis--theatre is that young people al- * prevailing 35' ways commence with the blood- Didn't you forget an unsigned treasurer de- thirstiest and gloomiest of melo- drop slip and some history notes men. Quite dramas. On these monstrous on the back of an old envelope? of the alma themes they exert all the delicacyU to the extent cf adolescende; they display all * UH-HUH. Y PAH. tter to fellow- the tragic intensity of sweet seven- From yesterday's review of t they believ- teen, when they ought to be con- "State Street" - "Art is sometimes cerned only with the delicate and j explained as springing out of an rly based on. exquisite perishable themes in ; inner reality which transcends many issues. their own exquisite way." outer reality-desires dreamed into for the best And is not this exactly what a transformed world where the rsity and all "State Street" does? It is not, ad- 'prosaic and unlovely fall away and er have been mittedly, a "dancing" show in the imagined beauty finds its home." such sensa--- extraordinary sense of the Union,!*1 Harvard laid 'Opera, but it has a delicious fresh- But professor, don't you think by its action ness, a subtle innuendo of satire,; the dancing was lousy?j doubted. ,a slyly refreshing and intime at- * scrubwomen mosphere-above all, it shows a I The approaching Slide Rule Lynn Starling's "polite comedy"! is stupidly produced in the bur-j } lesque tradition of the vaudeville skit, representing a sort of cult ofj the obvious. Because of a few cas- ual references to the flat feet of1 7:00 P. M. - Young People's League. Topic: Jesus' Entry Into Jersualem." Leader: Mr. Theo- dore Trost. A an artist in the play, he stomps around the stage like a horse. An- other character in the, play, Eng- land's greatest novelist, is played statuesquely and very dully. When one character has a speech, all the rest stand with an air of patience, and not the slightest interest as though they were off stage waiting! for an entrance. Miss Ross herself' faints and shrieks like the Mack Sennett girls dodging pies. This week's production proves quite a study in the deplorable depths of direction. One visit ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St. at Fifth Ave. F. C. Stellihorn, Pastor 10:30 A. M.-Pastor's Sermon Sub- ject: "Imitators of God." -:, I FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A. Service. TER. M.-Regular Morning Sermon topic: MAT. ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty Ste. C. A. Brauer, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-German Service. 10:00 A. M.-Sunday School. 11:00 A. M.-English Service. Serg{ mon: "Jesus and Zacchaeus." 6:0 P. M...,tu entS .np 12:00 5:30 M.-Student Bible Class. P. M.-Student Fellowship iI I and Supper. 6:30 P. M.-Student Forum, the topic: "Jesus Christ the Man." - J A - nD _ ID lv' I 11:45 A. M.-Sunday School follow- ing the morning service. 7:30 P. M.-Wednesday Evening testimonial meeting. i 11 11 11 11