FACE 'OU1E THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNE~SDAY, APRIL. 29, 100t Published every morning except Monday $tu ra e Taniversity year by the Board in' Cotstl 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 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 granted by Third Assistant Post Master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.0; by stall, 3frice sAnn Arbor Press Building, May- Maed Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF . Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR WELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman........(.rore C. Tille City Editor.............Pierce Rosenberg News Editor................Donald J. Kline Sports Editor......Edward L. 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Marian Atran Mary Jane Kenan Dorothy Bloomgarden Virginia( McComb Lara Codling Alice Xle(,uly )thel Constas Sylvia Miller Josephine .Convisser Ann Verner Bernie Caser Doothea Waterman Anna Goldberger Joan Wiese Hortense Gooding WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1930 Night Editor-WM. C. GENTRY BEFORE WHICH TIMIDITY MUST FLEE. Hard upon the heels of the re- port that Wisconsin's Exeprimental College is to be junked in June has come the announcement by the Madison faculty of several sweep- ing innovations in the curriculum structure of its literary college. In brief, the revisions allow for great- er selectivity and easier adjust- ment of freshmen, a wide use of comprehensive examinations, grad- cation of all qualified students at the end of two years with certi- ficates of Graduate in Liberal Stu- dies, and more pregnant opportun- ities for the upperclassmen to spe- cialize in either honors courses or majors. The provisions also de- clare that at the end of the first two years, 15 per cent of the stu- dents will be dropped and 20 per cent permitted' to remain advised- ly.I While at no time since its in- ception three years ago has Dr.I Meiklejohn's experimental unita been considered as more than an extreme and rather anarchial edu- cational spectacle, the application of certain of its tenents to the lib- eral arts college manifests its chief value to the academic world. An avowedly radical educational or-I ganization was equipped with the ultra in pedagogical theories, both substantive and adjective, and then set operating to prove or invalidate their worth. The net result of these mechinations has been the incorporation of such innovations as seemed profitable and efficaci- ous into the fabric of the entire liberal arts college. The essence of Wisconsin's revis- ions in curriculum, admissions and examinations is directly germaine to the University College proposal atS Michigan, which aimed to embody in principle the same changes as are announced for Wisconsin., jected for the University College. Whatever other objections yet remained to be voiced against the University College, that staid ar- gument based upon timidity and hide-bound circumspection which! objects to untried projects is knocked off its pins, so to speak, and has far to seek for further substantiation. It naturally follows TO 'ROLL HER CARDBOARD LOVER. (A short but brief review by Joe Tinker). Music And Drama PLAY CONTEST ANNOUNCE MENT. --- -a ,- Because the date for the produc- tion of the prize-winning play by Plo bCrrininVn nntyho f34N47WLLYLWVLLL. .V. WWI.WL ...LL, ... k ay roduction nas recenty peen 1 by inference that a policy of "nat- If you get pains in the neck read- ural mutation" or "evolutionary ing reviews and seek vainly for shifted forward some few weeks, progress" may not be utterly aban- some concrete statements regard- the judges in the contest today an- doned, in the light of working evi- ing the play under discussion, this nounced that the final limit for dence at Wisconsin of the Univer- review is your meat. Because- manuscripts will be Friday noon, I sity College's practical worth, or 1. "Her Cardboard Lover," as April 25th. The manuscripts can permitted to receive the full in- produced by Bob Henderson, is en-' heritance of a progressive and re- tertaining. be left in either the Rhetoric, sponsible example. The University' 2. It is as well done as you Speech, or English offrices. College has never wanted leader- might expect from a cast made up The previous date for the closing ship; but on the basis of a tried of a characteristically heterogen- of the contest was today. The new Di ~~~~~~ ~ Iarragmn ae osbefrh scheme it may now overcome the eous list of seven actors and act-arangement makes possible furth- lack of confidence which it has resses in all stages of experience. er revisions in plays already finish- met heretofore almost fatally. 3. The sets are not so hot. ed and last acts for the plays that 4. But the final result is worth would have failed to make theI 0-f a dollar. Ilimit today. PARKER REJECTION. Having seen the original show }several years ago, and having The recent unfavorable report of never before seen Robert Hender- A GUEST DIRECTOR AT PLAY the Senate Judiciary committee on son in action, I went to the Lydia PRODUCTION. the confirmation of Judge John J. Mendelssohn with the feeling that, Excitement-a valuable and not well, after all, what the heck. I Parker for the Supreme court left with the feeling that the too selfish sort of excitement-is bench is certain to reflect unto- present company had made a pret-- pleasantly stirring the dramatical- wardly on the character of the na- ty good job of the lover who was ly-minded people of this campus. tional government. To protect the not too cardboard. Values of various sorts accruing to Amy Loomis makes an attractive themselves are being anticipated. privileges, of the Negroes and the AaFor Lenox Robinsoninterna- and eager Simone; Henderson is laboring class is an honorable un- good as the conscientious card- tionally known in his several roles dertaking but the members of the board lover; Lewis McMichael is as playwright, producer, director, committee were more influenced convincing as the very busy rouee; manager and personality, has the by the potential political reactions and Minna Miller is effective as the results of a lifetime's experience at than by any 'gratefulness for the maid-but there is a certain some- one of the most important theatres welfare of these two divisions of thing that keeps the individual in the world to offer humble stu- society. members of the cast from mould- dent aspirants. His three-weeks' The committee report is some- i ing into a complete cast; something visit here under the auspices of what an imitation of the attack on that gives the impression of de- the Division of English is quite the Hughes but the latter must beI tached attention, as though the most important thing to happen Hughes lbutl thealattertumustnbe classed as far more dignified. members had =rehearsed by mail to the local dramatic situation in Hughes was opposed by a group and fitted the show together at the some years. Besides his daily con- of Progressives who sincerely be- last minute. Perhaps the action tact with the students in rehearsal lieved that a more liberal attitude (which is very slow in spots-es- at Play Production, Mr. Robinsonr should be taken on social and eco- pecially in the first act) is respon- is to give several lectures. He nomic legislation that the conser- sible for this. Whatever it is, it visit is to culminate with the pro- vative jurists of the Hughes type bothered me. duction in the Mendelssohn the- would be likely to adopt. Another thing that bothered me atre of his own popular comedy, "The White Headed Boy" May 8 Judge Parker on the other hand was the carelessness regarding was unfavorably reported to the such small details as impractical91 23 Senate because the committee window curtains which obviously Mr. Robinson's brilliant career members feared that the, opposi- remained in place in spite of the has been very intimately connect- tion by labor and Negro leaders fluttering hands of the maid, and ed with the brilliant career of the would lose them many votes in cigarettes that emitted no fumes Abbey Theatre wDubln since a forthcoming elections. Whether or! because of faulty ignition. day in his youth when he was in- not such disadvantages would re- Allan Handley did what he could Butler Yeats, the father of the sult is much disputed by observers for the sets but they are awfully but it is certain that the motives artificial and do not add to the Irish National Theatre. A letter behind the judiciary committee's illusion. The saloon bar is pretty signed by Yeats and Lady Gregory i vote were purely political. sloppy-and no pun is intended. tuals in Ireland in 1904 turned' Judge Parker's opinions on labor After all, however, the value of tobe a genuin mne4 The unions and Negroes has been much the entertainment does not lie in out to be a genune manifesto. The misrepresented. The recognition the inanimate phases of the pro- iste ate mons aftsex- of "yellow dog" contracts depends duction-the play itself is just as istence a few months afterwards, largely on the exigences under gay as advertised and the lines has fulfilled all the conditions which they arise. His statement (which are in themselves neat) therein enthusiastically postulated on the status of the Negroes was are neatly handled. as ideals. . . .In the twenty-six years of its made in a political campaign in The two colored gentlemen inactity, ty Teatrefhas North Carolina where the race the orchestra pit are an innova- activity, the Abbey Theatre has question -is far more delicate than tion; on the whole it is apparent probably been more responsible in the northern and western states'that Bob Henderson worked hard than any other theatre in the detcte world for restoring vitality andi which several of the antagonistic to put the show over. I detected ignity tot roducti y ama Senators represented. In both in- no bored expressions among the stances his opponents failed to customers and I venture to say you and for bringing drama back into consider the circumstances. There won't be bored. the field of' literature. In 1928 it are perhaps few men of long public' had produced 216 plays by 86 auth- experience who have been faced And here is that in-between edi- ors, nearly all of them Irish. Yeats with these questions that would tion of our famous literary maga- and Lady Gregory have been pro- be entirely immune to the charges zine' of which I spoke yesterday. lific and successful dramatists. j This issue is not for sale. It is just iJohn Millington Synge has probab- another Rolls gift, unmarred by ly been the most important drama- isThe utter lack of sincerity in advertising and all extraneous matist. Still a young man, Robinson e uiterialsxis one of the most noteworthy of I their report discredits completely the coterie influenced b nge to any claims of liberality that the cm m mberighthetTHE OUTLANDISH turn their literary talents to the i c.make. They were concerned only (Published five times a year, per- dramatic presentation of contem- with their own ocerned Il haps, by the students of the Uni- I porary Irish life. Some of his most is exceedingly unfortunate that versity of Michigan.) striking successes have been come- the Senators composing what they PEGASUS FEATHERS, A Poem-_ dies of peasant life like "The thlee Setorseoemposinfwhash Lips vainly seeking White Headed Boy," allege to be the most dignified as- sembly in the country, can not be Arms raised to the gold-flecked One of the most difficult things sky, the Abbey Theatre have done is more high minded in deciding the more high minded i bdciding the: The purple twilight blinds me, the disruption of the stage-tradi- calibre of so lofty a body as the ItikIlIto htmd l rsmnrl United States Supreme Court. I think I'll go over to the Union tion that made all Irishmen rob- I______and get a malted ... . lickingly absurd and jovial people I Hohum! fairly choaking with saccharine What is this sentiment. The Nationalist aims CapusinnThat chokes us, strangles is, of the Abbey Theatre, with accu- Contributors are asked to be brief, throttles us? racy of representation as one of confining themselves to less tian 300 Merry Christmas to you, its ideals, has delivered the stage w ations will i e isregl.Annm us ce And a Happy New Year too. from that butchery of Irish life, names of communicants' w.ill, however, 0-'the Peg-O-My-Heart part stan- be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be GARBAGE OF THE GODS, dardized by Dion Boucicault. construed as expressing the editorial A Story- The Abbey Theatre has been Iopinion of Trhe Dtily. r Itr- h bbyTetehsbe Bernice would 'always be that I quite as famous for the quality of UNWARRANTED PROCTORING. t way to him-he knew it-Or then its acting as for the dramatic again, maybe not. . . . Maybe she writing it has made possible. C. E. To the Editor: jwould be this way. . . . Yes, dis- Montague's criticism of their act- Since entering the University I tinctly - instinctively - Or would ing has become a classic of dra- have been continually struck by she?-he wondered. . . . That was matic criticism. He says of them: the idea that the student body the problem of existence. . . . Ber- "The Abbey actors have found here lacks a scholastic esprit de nice. . . . Roses, beds of roses in means to continually gain the ef- corps which prohibits it from at- rich brown earth . . . The moon ... feet of spiritual austerity. More taming a sincerity in its academic Stars . . . Soft breezes . . . A body than others, they have undone the pursuits. There appears to be lit- displaces its own weight in the things that ought not to be done. tle opportunity for the student to liquid in which it floats . . . to hell None of them rants or flares, trum- realize the actual value of con- with Einstein . . . Einstein is wrong pets or booms, or frisks about I scientous study and there is too and Bernice is right . . . Washing- when he had better be quiet, or I much that drives him to consider ton is situated on the Potomac puts on intense looks for nothing.' classes, as something to be tolerat- river, two hundred miles from - - - . They contrive to reach back ed in order that he may obtain a New York . . . To hell with New past most of the futilities, the in- perfunctory degree as a credential York. expressive apparatus of expression, for entrance into the business o (that over-grow and clog the stage; world. BOOK SECTION- they take a fresh clear hold cf .s Drink4 Deicious and Refreshing There's a Sl ver Lining .4 S. .... ;li e~- : - - ; t j 'fi " .s /j .. ! f { Z y ' , ' ,.. ., t . a r w ti k~v intePause that refreshes, So many unhappy things can happen to increase that old inferiority complex. 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