PAGE FOUt. THE MICHICAN D I iLY - SUNDAY, APPflt i!'i7~ * ~ - ____________________________________________________________________________ :' Published every morning except Mondayl during tae University year by the Boad in Conti o of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled 1 to the. use for republication of all news 'dis- patches credited to it or not otherwise credited tothis paper and the local news published1 herein.E Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- waaster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.06; by mail,; fffices: Ana Arbor Press Building, May- Sad Street.- . Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 212t4. EDITORIAL STAF? Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY . Editorial Chairman..........George C. Tilley City Editor ................. Pierce Rosenberg News Editor......... ... ...Donald J.Kine Sorts Editor........Edward L. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor ............ Marjorit, Follmer Telegraph "Editor.........Cassa A. Wilson Music and 1)rarma....... William J. Gorman Literary Editor........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant. City Editor.... Robert J. Feldman Night Editors-Editorial Board Members Frank E. Cooper hlenry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. ;glos Charles R. Kaufman Walter W. Wilds Gurney Williams Reporters Morris Alexander. Bruce J. Manley Bertram Askwith Lester May --Helen Bare Margaret Mix Maxwell Bauer David M. Nichol Mary L. lebymer William Page Allan H. Berkman Howard H. Peckham Arthur J. Bernstein II ugh Pierce 8. eah oner Victor n Rabinowitz S. Beach Conger' Joh .Rid John D. Reindel Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts Helen Domine Joseph A. Russell Margaret Eckels Joseph Ruwitch Catherine Ferrin Ralph R. Sachs Carl F. Forsythe Cecelia Shiiver Shtldon C. Fullerton Charles R. Sprowl Ruth Gallmeyer Adsit Stewart Ruth G~eddes S. Cad well Swansosi Ginevr Ginn Jane Thayer jack Goldsmith Margaret Thompson Emrily Grimes Richard L. Tobin Morris Gove-maa Robert Townsend Mar aret Harris Elizabeth Valentine 1. Cullen Kennedy Harold 0. Warren, Jr. Jea Levy G. Lionel Willens ussell E. McCracken Barbara Wright Dorothy Magee Vivian Zit is BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant - Manager ALEX K. SCHERER y Department Managers Advertising..... ..... Hollister Mabley Advertising.........iasper Ii. Halverson Advertising...........herwood A. Upton Service...................eorge A. Sp~ater Circulation..............J. Vernor avis Accounts................o n R. Rose Publications... .. eorge lR. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assistants James E. Cartwright George R. Patterson obert Crawford Charles Sanford Thomas M. Davis Lee Slayton Norman Eliezer Joseph Van Riper Norris Johnson Robert Williamson Charles Kline Wilam R. Worboy Marvin Kobacker Thomas Muir Dorothy Bloomgardner Alice McCully Laura Codling Sylvia Miller Agnes Davis Elemor wV'Alkinsham' Bernice- Gaser Dorothfea Waterman Bortense Gooding, SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1930 Night Editor-ROBERT L. SLOSS tical" is a corruption of its original good sense of wise, sagacious, pru- dent, or discreet. I T oASFROLLV' f1 f I" Music And Drama CI r _. it I El- READ THE DAILY Want Ads f is i Tinted bread suggests the! thought that the staff of life might yet resemble a barber pole. -o Beauty alone is almost worthlesst in motion pictures, says Cecil B., De Mille, the famous producer. But 1 worthless or not, beauty is our own- excuse for seeing.r 0---- The senior class has announced its fourth last chance for buying invitations to the commencement exercises. Along about the middle of June about half the class will be giving the things away. o i fi r i E i l l r DAILY jDALIES FRANTZ UNOFFICIAL IN PIANO RECITAL. BULL. Dalies Frantz, local pianist, will Publication of the Bull is de- appear in recital in Hill Auditor- ium this afternoon at 4:15. Mr. structive notice to all members of1Fatthis.afteroon wi:e r. Frantz thi's year won wide recog- the University and their families. nition by his winter concert tour of Copy received by the Rolls editor more than forty-three concerts. until all hours of the night. Last week he played a series of re- citals in New England some of them' VOL. XL. No. 136 being joint appearances with his SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1930 mother, a well-known singer and frequent soloist with the Boston Sigma Delta Chi: The Grid ban- Symphony Orchestra. uet will take place Wednesday Boston critics last week were night in the ballroom of the Union. quite commendatory of Mr. Frantz's The program will be the funniest, offerings. The Boston Transcript most entertaining program ever ' said that: Intelligent vividness of conceived by a Program chairman. interpretation marked his perform- Joe Tinker, ance. In the Bach Chromatic Fan- Chairman of Program Com. tasy and Fugue, one followed the well-worn measures with no small Literary Students: I will not be degree of interest. Beautifully shap- able to meet my class today. ed was every phrase, well-ordered A Prof. the progress of the whole." The Christian Science Monitor had this Playwriting Class: It has come to to say: "He played with brilliance my attention that the Grid ban- and verve. One heard cleanly chisel- quet will be held Wednesday night led tones, smoothly rounded phras- in the ballroom of the Union. I ing, a practised technique and a do not like Grid banquets. There gootc feeling forthe spirit of Bach's will be a mid-semester examina- works." Lion in Playwriting Wednesdaywr. ti.n i ting0 Wednesday The recital today is probably one Kenn'eth Rowe. of Mr. Frantz's last appearances in Ann Arbor before he sails to Europe early in June for work under Ar- From a fire story in The Daily: thur Schnabel in Berlin. The pro- "The fire was put out by the local gram follows: fire department." When you come Pastorale and Capriccio... Scarlatti right down to it, there's nothing Romance...............Brahms like patronizing home industries. Prelude, Chorale, and Fugue.... ** ...................Cesar Franck .t ¢t c- Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 woi-'As of possible. Anon ymous conm- munications will e disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, besregarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published sItomid not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The £aily." COMPLIMENT. , I' I I I i, ;, To the editor: , Please accept unle compliments of a venerable "prof" and Daily read- er of 23 years' standing on your # grid banquet editorial. Dig away more frequently and! consistently at the roots of the hu- manities and see that your subor- dinates do the same. It will assist in eliminating fossils, and it will even help very much in turning out cultured young men and women-! a curiously overlooked duty of a university. Your paper has a far greater in-j fluence for good or evil than the most imaginative of undergrad-! uates can possibly realize. It took! me many years to find this out. -Professor. I have been asked by no less >I C C t i t f S THE CHERUBS DEFENDED. I To, the editor:t As a Cheboygan citizen and a' University student, I am register-? ing a protest against your cruel edict that the pictures of the de- bate champions be removed from their place in University hall. OfI all the various and sundry bulletinl boards on the campu's; that - one Saloneis devoted to news about thej Michigan High School Debating; league which is managed by the University. Every year the pictures of the state champions are en- shrined there, not to be removedj till a new set of champions shall remove them. One year Kalamazoo: "cherubs" held the fort. Another year it was the Royal Oakers. Even 1 a person than Robert Henderson to review "Her Cardboard Lover" who (or which) is coming here April 21. Advance publicity notices contain several choice stories con- cerning the production, probably, the most interesting of which is this: It seems that after 162 per- formances of the original show in New York with Jeanne Eagels and Leslie Howard as the stars, it was taken to Chicago for a 10 weeks' run. Thereafter a long and pros- perous tour was booked but unfor- tunately Miss Eagels went to a party in Milwaukee and didn't come to for some four days. FAIR ENOUGH? Dear Joe: My roomie bet me a pound box of caramels you would. not print a letter that didn't even. try to be funny. Will you help me out? Just A. Co-ed. All right, Just, but don't forget that I like caramels too. * * *- Troikka en traineaux. Tschaikowsky Sheep and Goat Walkin' to the Pasture ................... Guionj Danse Rituelle du feu.... .De Falla Etude in E major ........... Chopin Hungarian Rhapsody No. 12.. Liszt ONE-ACT PLAYS WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. Wednesday and Thursday of this week Play Production is present- ing a bill of four one-act plays in the University Hall Auditorium. The bill is to include Alice Gers- tenberg's The Pot-Boiler, Lawrence Langner's Another Way Out, The Sweet Meat Game, and The Re- hearsal. This bill is strictly a laboratory production in accordance with the policy adopted of as far as pos- sible giving all students in the class actual experience. The plays are also being directed by advance student members of the organiza- tion, with the individual sets plan- ned and built by members of the class in stage design. Tickets for this bill which are free may be obtained by applica- tion at the; office of Play Produc- tion in. University Hall. PHILIP STERN RECITAL .TUESDAY. A POLITIC MOVE. The recent dismissal of Dr. Cabot might better remain a -closed inci- dent, but perhaps we can be ex- cused for reopening it if the en- . i LATE. NEWS FLASHES. Spring vacation will commence Friday afternoon and continue un- til April 21, it was announced at the beginning of the academic Amw Ann Arbor lofty and High has occupied that" valuable space. Now, I: suing discussion discovers a. means to prevent further damage to the' University from similar causes. The true reason for Dr Cabot's demotion from the medical dean- ship was his failure to gain the support of his faculty for his ad- ministrative' measuies. Unfortu-; nately, however, the dissatisfaction of the medical faculty had no rec- ognized mouthpiece. Its only outlet was a back-handed, rather scur- rilous whisper campaign, waged ac- tively and bitterly by dissenting{ faculty members, which finally gained enough strength to strike the Cabot colors with an unseem- ly shout of triumph. Viewed in the abstract, nothing in the conduct of the medical dis- senters was irregular; when a fac- ulty lose confidence in the admin- tration of their dean, their privi- lege is to oust him., But there is no ousting machinery to accomplish the act without an unedifying squabble. In the demotion of Dr. Cabot many of the whispers start- ed by his opponents grew into ugly rumors with a wide circulation, and in turn Dr. Cabot's friends started counter-rumors calculated to discredit every one who had a finger in the pie, including those professors who have made the med- ical school what it is, and even the President and Regents of the Uni- versity. It is needless to point out that the accusations and recriminations attendant upon such an incident' have a deteriorating influence on both- the prestige and the academic efficiency of the University. If a method could be devised of ascer- taining more certainly and openly' when a dean has lost the support of his faculty, his demotion could j liea ,enlisi hM wit~yjhmrit. A41 ask you, why did the Michigan year. Philip Stein, pupil of Professor Daily try to dethrone the present , l Albert Lok-wood of the School of incumbents before their time? Have - letLcwo o h colo Oh, my-this is one of those days Music, will give the following piano you ever been to Cheboygan and when it's too nice outside to sit in- program Tuesday night at 8:15 in got arrested or something? If so side and try to be funny. Carefree the school of music auditorium: we will petition the Chamber of students are out playing golf and Ballade op. 118 No. 4.....Brahms Commerce to give you the keys of riding and canoeing and having a Toccata..................Bach the town. Anything, only don't I'swell time and here I am pecking Introduction-Allegro-Andante perpetrate this outrageous act of away on the tickety-tick.. ding!( Alle vandalism by removing our champ- waiting for somebody to come in Aro. i , ~32 Variations .......... Beethoven 'ions until they cease to be such! and give me an idea. This is the) -M. J. Clawson. sort of a day when I'd print any- Etude Op. 25 No. 9.........Chopin So____ !thing in the line of a contribution Nocturne Op. 15 .......... ChopinI MORE LIGH T, LESS HEAT and yet with the exception of Just Scherzo B flat minor ...... Chopin T Co-ed all the contributors have - 1Theeitr:wassomeleft me flat. There ain't no justice. I Canzonette of Salvator Rosa. .Liszt; The writer was somewhat amus-; . Valse A flat........Liszt ed but not surprised to read in a *V*e*fa.-. recent issue of the Daily that the The Beachcomber just sidled up Etude of Paganini (La Chess) .Liszt! student council is again wasting to say that the secret of success injTOP- much time worrying about its own writing is to punch the right keys GABRILOWITSCH TO PLAY personnell and organization rather on the typewriter but I don't be- IN FINAL PAIR OF CONCERTS. than dealing with constructive lieve I'll print that because I know The final pair of subscription han e lingf ithen cgonstructie doggone well he didn't make it up concerts of the current season of 'problems of student government. himself. the Detroit Symphony Orchestra .It seems that for many years, and will mark the appearance, as cus- this year is no exception, the coun- - tomarily, of Ossip Gobrilowitsch cil has started out with firm re- Ias piano soloist. He is to play the solve to constitute a vital force in , Mozart Concerto for piano and or-: University affairs, yet its meetings ! chestra in D minor, the perform- result in nothing more than an op- ance of which in Carnegie Hall last portunity for its president to be ---- winter won him enthusiastic ac- quoted in the next morning's Daily Swell, claim. After intermission he is of- as issuing a statement as well as e fering the Weber Concertstuck in a chance for councilmen to have Notice to the D. O. B.: "Students F minor for piano and orchestra,; their name appear as members of in Mr. Fairbanks' scripture classes a somewhat slighter but altogether numerous committees. rwill hold an exhibition in Univer- charming concertino. Victor Kolar Now the council concerns itself ityhall." Oh well, scripture or will conduct the orchestra during with problems of internal organiza- sculpture, they both have to do these numbers. Mr. Gabrilowitsch tion. It seems plausible that the with the moulding of the common will lead the orchestra in the Men- council should first interest itself clay. . "Ph-z-z-z!" (Denoting the delssohn Overture from "A Mid- in taking a part in University ac- well known bird). summer Night's Dream" and Liszt's: tivities, in seeing that it is- given s I*symphonic poem "Les Preludes," an opportunity to become a factor' One of the boys on the business! which will complete the program. in such happenings. Moreover, it ( side of this paper says he knows 0 - appears wise that the council now why the new lamp posts are THE WILSON TO should pay more attention to ques- being put up in such symmetrical SERVE HOT CHOCOLATES.f tions of what it can do and then to lines. It'll help the boys on bend- "Hot Chocolates," pronounced the real action. Sitting back and con- ers to keep straight. best of the many shows that have tinually handling questions of ex- JOE TINKER. tried to emulate the first artistic iremely minor consequence will * * * negro revue that won international Attention It's a good idea-an excellen idea-to have all requisite toile and medicinal necessities when you neecr them. iere we list a few ite is reduced in price for our Semi-Annual Drug sale which continues through next week Write or telephone your orders i you cannot come down town- they will receive immediate atten tion. t ,t . if r i f mo SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK MINERAL OIL Pint .-----44c Quart--------67c Gallon-----.$1.79 f i i t '. r t 4 C f Squibbs Tooth Paste-------------------------3 for $1.00 Listerine Tooth Paste-.........------------. ... 3 for 51c Prophylactic Tooth Brush------------------------39c Tooth Brush Holders -----------------19c $1.50 Body Powders--------------------- ....---$1.29 $1.00 Body Powders- - - - - - 84c 50c D ew .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . 37c 50c Everdry--------------------------------------34c $1.00 Hind's Honey and Almond Cream-------------69c $1.00 Pacquin's Hand Creamm. .....89c 50c Woodbury's Cold and Facial Cream ..-...41c 35c Elcaya week-end sets ......29c 17c Square Puffs .. .2 for 25c 10c Puffs .....- - - 3 for 22c' 25c Pomade, white or rose.-.-..--------------- ......- 9c $1.50 Houbigant Lipsticks ........ 2 for $1.50, 79c ea. $1.00 Houbigant's Powder 89c $1.00 Lubin's Jasmin and Amarylis ..74c $2.00 Karess -........$1.59 $1.00 Fiancee 87c $1.00 Rosine. 79c Mell-oalo set.pow~der rand com-nncr ......8 $3.50 Coty's Perfume $3.50 Eve in Paris - $3.50 Flamme de Glorie .... ..... $2.95 oz. $2.95 ,oz. 2.95 oz. $3.50 Un air Em- baume-.......-!- -$2.95 oz. $3.50 D'Orsay -Fleur de France .$2.95 oz. I Gillette Blades .-. Auto Strop Blades 37c, 71c .... 39c a Palmolive Shaving Cream 27c Williams Shaving Cream . 27c Listerinc 21c, 43c, 67c $1.25 Nail Scissors 79c 15c Jergen's Violet Gly- cerine Soap..-. .. .2 for 5c 25c Cheramy Bath Salts 5 for $1.00 Cedarized Bags-----29c, 39c Modess-----------3 for $1.00 Kotex 3 for $1.00 a } :, t t 's "