THE MICHICAN. DAILY SA t F~ru tmDAY 'A 2, G 193~ Published every morning except Monday c during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. ti Member of Western Conference Editorial p Association. b The Asociated Press is exclusively entitled t to the se , for republication of all news dis. patches credited to it or not otherwise creditedt in this paper and the local news published t herein.;:n Entered .at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, it klicigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post. i tater General. t Subscription by carrier, $4.06; by mail, t 4o.ieT Rard Ann Arbor Press Building, May- 0 Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214.I EDITORIAL STAFF f Telephone 49254 MANAGING EDITOR4 ELLIS B. MERRY C - aIs Editorial Chairman........George C. rTlleyi City Editor............Pierce Rosenberg c News Editor..............Donald J. Kline Sports Editor.......Edward L. Warner, Jr. t Women's Editor..........Marjorie Folmer telegraph Editor..... .Assam A. Wilson 'Music and Drama......William J. Gormanp Literary hrliior....... Lawrence R. Kleint Assistant City ditor. Robert J. Fedmran Night Editors-Editorial Board Members- FrankE.Cooper ]ery J. Merry William C. Gentry, Robert L. Sloss Charks R. kaffman Walter WV. Wilds d Gurney Williams Reporterst "Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Bar David M. Nichol- Maxwell Bauer William Page Mary L. Bebymer Hoard H. Peckhaw Benjamin If. Berentsoniugh Pierce Allan -H.Berkman Victor Rabinowitz X Arthur J. Bernstein John D. Reindel t S. ]leach Conger Jeannie Roberts Thomas M. Cooley Joseph A. Russell f John H. Denler Jseph Rwitch Helen Domine ]Wiliam'P. Sazarulo Margaret Eckels Charles R. Sprowl l j athearine Verrin Adsi Stewart - t Carl F. Forsyhe S. Cadwell Swanso Sheldon C. Fulerton Jane Thayer Rth Geddes Margaret Thompson I Ginevra Ginn ~ichard L. Tobin Jack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine E Morris-Ct-roerman Harold O. Warren, Jr.- Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret Harris C. Lionel Willens ] David B. Hempstead John E. Willoughby £ j~.Cllen Kennedy Nathan Wise ean Levy Barbara Wright RussellE. McCracken Vivian Zimi' Dorothy Magee BUSINESS STAFF1 Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER F. A. J. JORDAN, JR. r. * t Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising.............. Hollister MableyI Advertising...........Kasper I. Halverson Advertising ......Sherwood A. Upton service................George A. Spater circulation....... ..J. Vernor Davis Acounts.............John R. Rose Publications...George R. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase a.- Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker JJa mes E. Cartwright Lawrence 'Lucey obert Crawford Thomas Muir fary B. Clver Geore R. Patterso Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford Norman Eliezer Lee Slayton jrues Hoffer Joseph Van Riper , orris Johnson Robert Williamson Charles Kline Willam R. Worboy Dorothy Bloomgardner Alice McCully Laura Codling Sylvia Miller Agnes Davis Helen R. Musselwite Bernice Glaser Eleanor Walkinshaw Hortense Gooding Dorothea Waterman Night Editor- WALTER WILDS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1930 THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. Like his other messages, Presi- dent Ruthven's recent remarks anent the University college leave us in two minds as to what he in- tends. He opens the dissertation with a caustic attack on the pro- ject's supporters, branding their "pitiless enthusiasm" as "imbued with an excess of misionary zeal," and depreciating their judgment as "surrendered to the fascination of a name," and hypnotized by the prospect of a "panacea for the conglomeration of chronic ills" that beset our eduactional system. On the other hand, with the diplo macy of which he is master, he set forth his purpose of eventually ac- complishing much the same end by conservative "controlled experi- mentation." We admit the disadvantages of sudden reform, but at the same time we are convinced that this University, as now constituted, hasJ strayed so far from its ideal pathI that something more drastic than "controlled experimentation," as President Ruthven uses the term, is needed to bring it back. We are impatient of endless piddling around to find a cure for some- thing monstrous, immediate, and distressing. Our suggestion is that President Ruthven preserve intact his method of "controlled experi- mentation," but make the Univer- sity college the first controlled ex- periment. President Ruthven recognizes that two great evils are inherent in Michigan's present educational system: (1) that too many stu- dents in the literary college spend altogether too much time acquir- ing too little depth of learning, and (2) that our professional colleges are so much influenced by trade school ideals of technical perfec- tion that their graduates are as- tonishingly deficient even in zuch elementary culture as knowledge and appreciation of their own lan- guage. The first of these two evils attains the proportions of a crime, or at least opens the University to a charge of using the A.B. degree to misrepresent an educated man. The second evil is more in the na- ture of a pity, but such a pity that )me contact with higher educa- on' is a va aie thing, it is our ontention that fully one half of he literary students waste two recious years that might infinitely etter be employed in discovering he hard facts of the world. For hese students, who attend collegef costly because everybody is doing t, the literary college is a soften- ng influence-little more, indeedc han a lesson in "just getting by." j 'o our way of thinking a division f the literary college into two un' ts could not "crush its first two ormative years back into the pre- ocious maturity of the high chool," for they are already so rushed back by the low scholastic tandards; and as for "dragging ts last two years, even more pre- ious in their development, into he professional atmosphere of the. raduate school," nothing could provide a more welcome. stimula- ion to those literary students whose desire for an education is honest and whose purpose is sin- cere. It will be answered, "Then raise the standards of the literary col- lege," but this is precisely what cannot be done at Michigan for the canny taxpayers will howl most pitifully if their sons and daugh- ters are returned in any numbers as unfit to receive the boon of higher education. Somehow these unfit must be bought off with a two-year diploma which will suffi- ciently attest their more-than- high-school aspirations, at the some time lessening their drag on those fit to explore the higher realms of education. Coincident- ally the compressed background of culture which would best serve the two-year literary graduate would almost exactly suit the professional novitaite as the proper foundation for his technical training. We sub- mit that a division of the literary course into two-year units-which is the essence of the University college-is as neat a solution of the problem as can be found. The chief fault with the Univer- sity college project seems to be that it is in advance of its times. Dis- satisfaction is even now wide- spread with the inability of liter- ary colleges as now constituted to provide adequately for all who want the type of education they offer. Already the movement to ward junior colleges - which are scale models of the University col- lege - has gained such headwa that the University is looking for- ward to matriculating an alway increasing number of third-yer students. To us it is a pity that hesitating, experimenting, recon sidering Michigan must follow in stead of lead this trend, especiall since we have the University col lege almost fully worked out in de tail, and needing only vigorou leadership to resolve the financia obstacle and settle the question o its relation to the College of En gineering and Architecture. 0 MEDICINAL-BUT NOT TOO PATENT. When discussions of remedia measures are heard in academi circles, the trend is inevitably to ward prophylactics, rather tha surgery. This is to the effect tha a considerable amount of quack ery and sooth-saying persists ram pant in otherwise respectably san minds. It is conservative to sa that pedagogic ills, particularly th two most acute ailments-the cur ricula and the admissions prob lems-need more than the micro scope. -0-- Editorial Comment SMARTNESS AND SOBRIETY. (Harvard Crimson) Interesting in the light of recen anti-prohibition furor is the re port of dry campaigning in th University of Michigan. This yea at least, the success of Ann Arbor gargantuan and perennial prop will not depend upon the qualit of the neighborhood bootlegger, fo when the long-expected day ar ' TYPEWRITER11S ROLL I Music And Drama ]RIBBONS ---n SiiP Pii! TODAY: At Mimes Theatre, last Tyor a maers BIRTHDAY, two performances this afternoonTpewriteru GEORGE. and evening of The Outsider by d over, fresh stock,, sures Doroty Bradon.best quality at a moderate price. Every year around February 22, Dorothy Brandon. George Washington has a birthday.' At Mendelssohn Theatre, las 0. D. MORRILL It's a strange but true fact that two performances this afternoon 314 South State St. Phone 6615 great men always have their birth- and evening of Theo Breyer's pic-;- - days on holidays. And this year tire, Joan of Ar. ! it comes on Saturday, so the poor ' students don't get out of classes. The Father of his Country didn't 1 QUARTET Sdo right by his children. A Review by William J. Gorman. I It appears that the New York * * * String Quartet wasn't sufficientlyc Just like Licoln, for ex- informed of Ann Arbor's aspira-!Uj ample. te was born on a loli lions to musical prominence. Rat- IoOur Trademark is day, and so was Santa Claus- "d hirmi a o was Santa Clausy tling applause greeted their main your assuranceof was he? The Fourth of July program, mild enough in itself always falls on a holiday just with an early Dvorak and an early Iadge perfection like New Years but you always e Nw I Beethoven quartet mildly played; need New Years day to get over so they encored most generously ', Fraternity and the headache contracted the with two pot-boilers so disgustingly Sorority Baages night before. I Srriy Leu i 1 familiar as to be at the moment * W unrecognizable (Charles Wakefield Cadman perhaps, and a familiar vBurr, Patterson and1 )Tango). That they enjoyed doingAu those things left us slightly sus-,ACod C picious of their accompli'shments on the reular program. That they Fraternity Jewelers and thought it necessary to do them in Stationers wAnn Arbor accusation of provincialism which Ann Arbor 603 Church Street should have resented, though it.. didn't seem to. George, of cherry tree fame, held But aside from their encoring I some official position with the faux pas, the New York Quartet Want Ads Pay United States-judge or something. ,must be recognized as still a see- He probably never looked like this, ond-rate organization. Their in- but he might have. terpretations are undoubtedly gen- uine to themselves (and genuine- And now that I've finished ness sends "bridges across perilous, my theme song, and finished hostile air"); but they are not gen- this outrage against the man erous. They achieve communica- whose wife made 'the Ameri- tion somewhat too facilely on a can flag, I'll turn to matters of . middle level of achievement, sue- more importance, if any. ceeding in the minor matter of ,e, , 1 perfection in many details but You kwh lhardly grasping and clarifying oducers adage: When in doubtr their relations profoundly. They sing the theme song and shoot the do have a somewhat ravishing villain. range of color, (employed very in- telligently for example to quicken tilli4I y interest in the Dvorak Lento, whichw Thursday night the faculty is essentially 'unquartistic' in that of the literary college had ,a of hc itearycolegehad. a the writing is in simple vocal har-;: meeting to decide what educa- ir it th m d h tion means. They argued for monic style, with the melody in the hours and never came to any first vfolin.) For the most part CHURCH conclusion, and yet they ex- (excepting occasionally the cello HR pect the hard working students and the over-modest first violin) Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. to answer really difficult ques- they are capable of beautiful tone- Mi., Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, D. D- Y tions on examination. quality. They also showed definite Associate Minister, Rev. Samuel J. a.Harrison Student Director, Mr. appreciation of dynamic nuances. Ralph Johnson. Mrs. Allura Win- s But their intei'est lies too exclu- ters, Advisor of Women Students. r W ~eather forecast for Ann Arbor sively on the surface. They depend 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. and vicinity: fair and warmer un- til the weather man realizes that for their mode and rhythm of Series: "Four of Life's Major Mo- - to ta n al zst ha r ssi o themitives. IV "RIGHT." Dr. Stalker. Ann Arbor has had almost a week progon te success in 12:00 M.-FOUR DISCUSSION y of good weather without rain, color and dynamics; in the sense I GROUPS at Wesley Hall. Lead- - snow, or ice. that they progress from moment ers: Miss Ellen W. Moore, Prof. - to moment of dynamic or colorful G. E. Carrothers, Prof. S. F. s But sprig does seem t be interest. And generally without Gingerich, and Mr. Ralph R. l here. For the benefit of the proper regard to the quality of 3:00 P. M.-Kappa Phi Tea. d uninitiated, however, we wish the attitude being communicated, 6:00 P. M.-Wesleyan Guild Devo- to say that appearances are though in time, ultiinately as unity. tional Meeting. deceiving, because you can't I am speaking really of the Bee- 7:30 P. M.-Evening Worship. expect good weather in Ann thoven Quartet. This was from Arbor until June 25. Op, 18. But however early, it was not Haydn but the early Beethoven, it vigorously enjoying his health and FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH le There's one thing - no, two healthy ambition, asserting his joy. On East Huron, west of State - things I don't like about spring. In the hands of the New York Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister One of them is the gathering of String Quartet, the attitude be- Howard R. Chapman, Minister for I dogs on the campus every day, but comes thinner, more naive and Students. I don't mind that so much. What childlike, certainly less important : - gets under the skin of every red- and inclusive. The result was due, 9:45 A. M.-Church Bible School - blooded man from the West (Kan- I think, to their over-preoccupation Wallace Watt, Supt. t sas and Oklahoma excluded) are . 9:45 A. M.-University Class at Y the glee clubs singing sweetly un- with the achievement of pleasing Guild House, Mr. Chapman. e der sorority house windows, surface effects and their lack of 10:30 A. M.-Worship and Sermon. feeling for the composition in the Mr. ak "WHY I C j BELIEVE IN GOD." (The first - whole as unified expression. It is I in series of four sermons on "God, y- essentially one of the criticisms I the Supreme Issue.") had to make of the Lener Quartet, 6:30 P. M-In Church Parlors. j,, ti 1 __ --s.aiClements, Mich. will give illus- more brilliant and much better tared travel talk on, "Glimpses equipped technically and intellec- of Egypt." tually. The Russian group of short num- bers was played more satisfac-_ torily; the Borodin numbers be- j cause they were shorter and easier BETHLEHEM Their mouths are not always to grasp, the Moussorgsky Sere- EVANGELICAL CHURCH t open as wide as when the above nade because it forces a unified - picture was snapped--unluckily- conception on the performer with (Evangelical Synod of N. A.) e or it would be much easier to do p r, away with this perennial pest plucked celo-sting, the Glazou- Fourth Ave. between Packard and ar'is piuke ho eeo-sracgr, the o G azou- 0 A William m** now because it was nothing but ftv fedr .Simt y Spring songs, proverbs, and such surface music. Those two encores Rev. Theodore R. Schmate r are inorder now. were well played I suppose but it - Roses are red, really didn't matter. 9:Mo A.ZM.-Bible School. i nlar nsz± ~ l FOR FOOD That Pleases the Palate i t i # I and TTSITf That Soothes the Nerves TO ENJOY A SUMPTUOUS REPAST YOU MUST COME OVER TO I THE CHUBB HOUSE only $5.75 per week _: . .; . . '; PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH I-furon and Division Sts. Merle IL Anderson, Minister Mrs. Nelle B. Cadwell, Counsellor for University Women. 10:45 A. M.-"An Ancient Hero Who Became a Clown." HILLEL FOUNDATION 615 E. University Dial 3779 Services at Rabbi A. 7:30 the H. P. M.-Religious Michigan League. Fink will speak. 12:00 NOON-Class in Religious Problems" McClusky. "Modern Professor 8:30 P. M.-Special Freshman Open House at the Foundation. 11 '1 Newly registered students and all I Iothers are urged to attend. 5:30-7:30 P. M.-Young People's Social Hour and Devotional Meet- ing. Leader: Hamilton Easton. TUNE IN! Sunday Morning Servioe of the DEIROIT UNITY CENTER brfaicast frout The Deta ic Civic The ame 11:30 A.M. Ea- n Stand. Tino. 6140 a Cea taa M Thu wJR Detroit EVERY ThURSDAY EVG (Segioniag 3 . , 1930) .LECTURE ON PRINCIPLES OF SUCCESSFUL LIVING Zoning forth the Priociples by which .up may unfold widdi his lift the 'Isehhi Peae ,and Prosocedy which 1 a rwdd God ha. prewided. ( 11:05P.M. Bat riStand. 7Tie. #so 5 P.M. Cenr wad Time. / FIRST CONGREGATIONAL State and William Allison Ray Heaps, Minister February 23, 1930 9:30 A. M.--Church School. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "Man With a Handicap."A 5:30 P. M.-Congregational Stu. dent Fellowship. 6:30 P. M.-Prof. Robert Hall's illustrated lecture, "The Japanese Empire of Today." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division and Catherine Sts. Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Rev. T. L. Harris, Assistant 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.--Holy Communion. (Student chapel in Harris Hall.) 9:30 A. M.-Church School. (Kin. dergarten at 11 o'clock.) 11:00 A. M.--Morning Prayer;. sermon by the RevgArtley B. Parson of the Church Mission House, New York. 6:30 P. M.--Student Supper in Harris Hall, followed by two study groups led by Dr. John Dorsey and Miss Lois Benson. ::45 P. M.-Evening, Prayer; ad- dress by Mr. Lewis, "The Miracle at the Pool of Bethesda." ,, i r BE CONSISTENT IN YOUR RELIGION ATTEND CHURCH REGULARLY } 1 1 1 rives, college watchmen reinforced Vioets are blue, by local police will guard the dark j Dandelions are yellow, corners where erring stags are And sweet peas are all+ wont to drink their fill. It is said colors. that none but the brave deserve the fair and brave indeed will be . the undergraduate who under - Then, there's the old threat of expulsion finds means "In the spring a young whereby he may overlook the fancy." canker in the rose or blur thej- blemish on the girl of his choice. Although in this case the dic- tum is from above, this bit of news)\ fits in with a trend that sooner orI later is ;bound to become dominantz in American colleges. Prohibition° has enormously increased the em- phasis on drinking as a part of the t extracurricular activity that a re- vulsion is already in embryo. In the future sobriety will be-I come the vogue; the advantages of the sober or partially sober over the obviously influenced will ob- '-0 FOLLOW THRU different Schwoband Mandel's musical comedy, exploiting and exhausting; the comic possibilities of the most s g hilarious of contemporary pastimes, man's golf, starts the third week of its run at the Cass Theatre in Detroit. This show has duplicated the suc- cess of Good News in being able to play townsover the country a see-). a ond time. It is a frenzied and originalE carnival of youth, employing the many amusing moans about "mod- Sern youth" as stimulation to bright, snappy dialogue. It is all tomfoolery around a country club, on the golf links where no less! than four women are in love with the shiek who swings the mean mashie. 10:00 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "The Ultimate Goal of Devotional Life." 11 11:00 A. M.-German Service. 7:00 P. M. - Young People's League. .11 11 P. 1I I'- ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St. at Fifth Ave. C. C. Stellihorn, Pastor 10:30 A. M.-Morning Service. Sermon topic: "The Sufficiency of Grace." FIRST CHURCH, CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A. M.-Regular Morning Serv. ice. Sermon topic: "MIND," II ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty Sts. C. A. Brauer, Pastor 11 11 11:45 A. M.-Sunday School follow- 9:00 A. M.-German. 10:00 A. M.-Bible Class. 11 11 II ing the morning service. II 11 it