THE MICHIGAN DAILY Publishd every morning except Monday during te Unhiversity year by th Board in Conttil of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association.I 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 gr nted by Third Assistant Post. waster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.0.; by mall, $4. 0.' Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 492S; Business, arar4. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman .........George C. Tilley City Editor..............Pierce Rosenberg News Editor.............Donald J. Kline Sports Liditor...... Edward L. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor. .........Marjori Folmer. Telegraph Editor.......Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama........William J. Gorman Literary Editor.........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Ed tor.. . Robert J Feldman Night Editors--Editorial Board Member Frank E. Cooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. :loss Charles R. Kantfman Walter W. Wilds Gurney Williams Reporters Morris Aleander. Bruce J. Manley hertran Askwith Lester May Helen Bare Mrga ret Mix Maxwell Bauer David M. Nichol Mary L. Behymer William Page Allan H. Berkman Howard H. Peckham Arthur J. Bernstein Hugh Pierce .rhBeacCnerst, Victor Rabinowitz Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts H en nes Joseph A. Russell Margaret Ekels Joseph uwiteh Catherine errin Ralph R Sacs ' Carl F. Forsythe Cecelia Shrver Sheldon C. Fullerton Charles R. Sprowl Ruth Gallmeyer Adsit Stewart Ruth Geddes S. Cadwell Swanso Ginevra Ginn Jane Thayer lack Goldsmith Margaret Thompson Emily G rines Richard L. Tobin Morris Govermn Robert Townsend Margaret Haris Elizabeth Valentine .Cullen Kennedy Harold O. Warren, Jr. an Levy G. Lionel Willens ussell E. McCracken Barbara Wright Dorothy Magee Vivian Ziit BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising.............. Hollister Mabley Advertising...........Kasper II. Halverson Advertising.............herwood A. Upton Service .................George A. Spater Circulation........ .... .. Vernor Davis Accounts..................John R. Rose Publications...........eorge R. Hamilton Biusiness Secretary-Mary Chase Assistants James E. Cartwright George R. Patterson Robert Crawford Charles Sanford Thomas M. Davis Lee Slayton Norman Eliezer Joseph Van Ripe Norris Johnson t Robert Williamson Charles Kline Wiliam R. Worboy Marvin Kobacker Tomas Muir' Dorothy Bloomgardner Alice McCully Laura Codling Sylvia Miller Agnes Davis Eleanor Walkinshaw Bernice Glaser Dorothea Watermani Hortense Gooding TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1030; Night Editor- WALTER WILDS "NOT REPRESENTATIVE" 'Representative Grant M. Hud- son, prohibitionist extraordinary from Mich gan's sixth dirtrict, ' does not like the Literary Digest's straw vote. That is to be expected from a prohibitionist, but the rea- sons he assigns leave us in two minds whether to be angry or amused. The Digest poll, according to this dry act, is "not representative"; the attitude of the people is "cor- rectly reflected in the number of dry members of Congress." The militant ladies of the Christian Temperance Union upon whom he perpetrated this characteristic bit of dry logic without doubt clapped vigorously, conscious of the strengthI their cause derives from Con- gress's voting aridity. But we can seriously doubt either, the intel- ligence or sincerity tof any one who believes that the House of Repre- sentatives reflects the nation's at- titude toward prohibition more ac- curately than the Digest poll. The house is notorious for the Inaccuracy of its representation. In the first place its membership has not been reapportioned since 1910-a direct violation of the con- stitution for which popular demand has tardily won recognition. Rep- resentative Hudson will unques- tionably have to recount his dry associates when Congress convenes after the reapportionment recently voted over dry opposition. In the second place, prohibition, has never been made a clear-cut is- sue in Congressional campaigns; until the memorable Hoover-Smith battle it had no nation-wide poli- tical significance and mor; often than not took an unimportant place in the office-seekers' plat-; forms. This year prohibition has1 been in the public eye and ear as1 never before; it cannot be subierg- ed in the approaching Congres-t sional elections. RepresentativeI Hudson himself will have to fight it out with an aggressive and pro-c nounced wet in the person of Statet Senator Seymour Person. And in the third place, it is com- mn n nwia~a mo't hf - a-lo 3, the 1928 Congressional primary as against 28,000 cast by the horti- cultural eleventh. The same condi- tion obtains in almost every stateI which concentrates its population in the cities, and yet some brazen souls still claim that the House is1 representative!I Against this sort of misrepresen- I tation we have the 95 per cent ac- curacy scored by the Literary Di-f gest in predicting the 1928 pres- idential canvass. The' Digest Poll indicated that Texas would go for Hoover by a small margin; Demo- crats scoffed, Republicans doubt- ed, but Texas went for Hoover. The same story was told in Vir- ginia, North Carolina, and Florida.! Representative Hudson can con- tinue to count dry noses in Con- gress; we would rather read the at- titude of the nation in the straw vote horoscope. SOMETHING AT LAST. The Interfraternity council has made news by at last ectually do- ing something. Along with the usual quota of resolutions propos- ed only to be accepted and forgot-' ten, a decision was reached at the last meeting which may lead to the reincarnation of the council as a representative mouthpiece of fra- ternity sentiment. The decision was a proposed con- stitutional amendment, whereby each fraternity belonging to the council must be represented dually, by a senior and a junior who to- gether would act as a house dele- gation. Each member of the va- rious delegations, it is proposed,1 must be present at the meetings of the house is to have power to answer roll call and vote. The junior representatives of next year, if the amendment is passed, will become senior . repre- sentatives of the succeeding school year. In their senior position, these men will bring to the interfrater- nity council both an experience with the working methods and a knowledge of what may be accom- plished by that body which should I prove valuable to the achievement of real results. At present, seniors who come to the fall council meeting often have never attended a meeting before. They don't know what the inter- ,fraternity council is all about un- I til after the early winter meeting, and before they can accomplish any important legislation the council has experiknced its two spring meetings and breathed its last for the current year. If the proposed amendment achieves its first aim of securing a senior group of representatives who can direct the council mach- inery intelligently, it is entirely possible that the council will cease to be one of the most laughable of undergraduate organizations and become an important means of, formulating and giving expression to fraternity group opinion. Doubtless the amendment will be thoughtlessly passed in the pusil- lanimously passive attitude which is at present characteristic of the council, but if some are found to enforce the representative scheme provided, the interfraternity coun- cil may well become what it should be-one of the most important of University organizations. SCmu O .Campus Opnio Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 worAs of possible. Anonymous com- mueations will be disregarded. The naines of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- i quest. Letters published should not he construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. APOLOGIA. To the editor: Unlike my fair sister, I wish to extend three cheers to the men who have made our life at the Uni- versity complete. (I voice the opin- ions of many, besides myself.) A' great many of our good times would not have been were it not. for the men. As to the "statistics", the old saying of three degrees holds good here-lies, damn lies, and statistics. The women do notl take part in so many extra-curri- I cular activities as the men, and' perhaps they apply themselves to their studies more, thus accounting1 for the difference in grades. But! those people must be quite unusual# who do not know by their senior year that it is ridiculous to tatk about either sex being "brighter" than the other. I h ve found thatI the most uninteresting classes (lack of discussion, etc.) were those in which there were prac- tically no men. As for the "charming sophisti- cation"-it should be left for others to decide whether or not we possess it, and if so, how desirable it really is. And why shou'dn't the men .L Music And Drama TODAY'S WEDNESDAY: Palmer Christi ALLEGED I E head of the organ department JOKE. ISp the School of Music. will nres, on, of ;ent i Hark To His Master's Voicel Saying GO-1o UNIVERSITY MUSIHOS For Everything McaI : , " V X ,1 Henry Whipple in a graduation re- cital in Hill Auditorium beginning Iat 4:15. A FATE SYMPHONY. TSCHAIKOWSKY: Symphony No. 4 in F Major, Op. 36: by Willem Mengelberg a n d Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam: Colum- bia Masterworks Set No. 133. "It is in reality a reflection of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony; I have copied his central poetic idea." News of this statement from a letter of Tschaikowsky's has had the curious results of giving the Fourth Symphony a quite unde- served popularity. The joy of an- nouncing to one's neighbors: that's "untiring Fate" in that passage; has hardly been proportionate tot the value of the music.t It is actually bad program music. The burden of the communication is left to the listener. One cane grasp the ideology or the mood-t ology from recognition of certaint stock Tschaikowskean habits of composition (self-flagellation: 2 phrase insisted on and tortured usually in canon by all the choirss in the orchestra; despair: the or-s iginal theme given to the oboes in! the minor with the original tempo cut; joy: theatrical sweeping of9 strings all over the hall; pathos: a folk tune quaintly scored and va- ried.) Thus aware of the process, ,one can dismiss the symphony as feeble sentiment quite unmusically expressed or let one's fancy vividly picture a bitter Tchaikowsky-Fate: struggle. The one way is more critical and aristocratic; the other more sensible and more popular. The one judges and scorns; the other may judge too, but is deter- mined to have an experience, how- ever impure. The second class will want this recording of the Fourthi Symphony, and will not have to apologize for it. Mengelberg gives the symphony a vigorous, intelligent reading, cor- rect in detail and forceful as inter- pretation. He rather boldly ex- ploits instrumental color through- out, generally with the happy ef-+ fect (for Tchaikowsky could score),; but frequently revealing strange contrasts, incoherence and , strain imn the writing. His reading of the string pizzicato section in the third movement is unconventional: very delicate and playful rather than, as usual, robust and high-spirited. There are technical flaws in re- production, confusion and blur- ring, at a few of the more bom- bastic moments in the first move- ment and Finale, but in general it is good orchestral recording. BRAHMS IN BOSTON. Dr. Serge Koussevitsky, who has the rather interesting habit of be- coming periodically discouraged with a two-a-week concert routine for his symphony orchestra, last week planned and executed a six day Brahms Festival. There was no sentimental, centennial motive except the quite respectable fact that Koussevitsky respects Brahms. With the help of Arthur Schnabel, Margaret Matzenauer, the series managed to include the four sym- phonies, the two piano concertos, the German Requiem, the Song of Destiny, some of the Liebeslieder Waltzes, the Academic Festival Overtures, the Piano Quintet, some songs and the piano pieces of op. i 1119.1 In commenting on the series, L. A. Sloper, Boston critic, had some interesting things to say: "In retro- spect of these six days Brahms seems more a romanticist than a classicist. Further, we are impres- sed less by his material than his handling of it, and we .find even in the handling more cerebration than inspiration. It seems to us too that there is wisdom in those who say that the Brahms of the songs, the piano pieces, and the chamber ensembles is greater than he of the symphonies and the big- ger choral compositons." This seems to approximate the contemporary judgment of Brahms,' reflected in such a book as Cecil Gray's History of Music. If it is the correct one, it means the re- legation of Brahms to the class of minor artists, reaching perfection only in the minor forms. It certainly must be enjoyable ko get the opportunity of an extend- ed survey of Brahms. Koussevit- sky has had three of these festivals now for Beethoven, Brahms and Schubert. After such tributes of i respect, there is nothing of dlisloy- Lowest Prices: TERMS To Suit. Play While You Pay. Radios:-. Majestic, Victor, Crosley Pianos:-- Baldwin, Kohler & Campbell Orchestral Instruments Victor, Columbia, Brunswick Records K@m'w kI "firO~aI.a { '-S4 z ASK THOMAS HINSHAV 601 East William Street -Mtn ood tobacco in(1ppe Thia'swhat you want! N1-Y do you hunt high and low and evrerywhere, when all the time hiere is good tobacco waiting to be smoked in your pipe? Why not dis- cover Edgeworth and be done. with your hunting? 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