PAGE 7OUro THE MICHIGAN DAILY wmmDAY, MAY 7, mo , . Published every morning beept Moaday Contwl of Student Publication Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled tothe use for republication of all news di. w atches credited to it or not otherwise credited this paper and the local news published .P erein., Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post.- mas~ter ,eneral.j Sdubsription by carrier, $4.e; by smal, OfficestAnn Arbor Press Building, May lard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAF Telephone 4925 r MANAGING EDITOR 1 ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman........George C. Tilley{ City Editor.............Pierce Rosenberg] News Editor. .......Donald J. Kline Sports Editor.......Edwar I. Warner, Jr. Nomen's Editor..... Marjorie Folmerj Tlegaph- Editor....... Cassam A. Wilson Musc and Drama......Wiliam J. Gorn i Literary 'Editor.....Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor.... Robert J. Feldman Night Editors-Editorial Board Members Frank 9. Cooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. yos Charles R. Kauffman Walter W. Wilde Gurney Williams Reporters Morris Alexander. Bruce J. Manley t Bertram Askwiti _ Lester May Helen Hare Margaret Mix - 31awel Bauer David M. Nichol Mary L. Behymer William Page Allan 8. Berkmna Howard H. Peckham ArthurJ. Bernstein Hugh Pierce- S. Beach Conger Victor Rabinowits S. Bee~h Cnger John D. Reindel Thomas M. cooley eannie Roberts Helen Domine oseph A. Russel Margaret Eckels oseph Ruwitch Catherine Ferri alph R. Sachs, Carl F. Forsythe CeceliaRShriver Sheldon 'C.yFullerton Charles R. Sprowl Rth Gallmeyer Adsit Stewart Ruth Geddes S. Cadwell Swanso GMmvra Ginane Thayer 'ak Goldsmith Margaret Thompson G Grimes Richard L. Tobin MOrris Covema Robert Townsend Mararet Harris Elizabeth Valentine Cull en Kennedy Harold 0. Warren, Jr. earl Levy G. Lionel Wilsens ussell E. McCracken Barbara Wright florothy Magee Vivian Ziris BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising............T. lollister Mabley Advertising ........Kaser H. Halverson Service ....,.George A. Spater Circulation.................. J. Vernor Davis Accounts....................John R. Rose Publications............. George R. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase ASs1tants James E Cartwright Thomas Muir obert Crawford George R. Patterson Thomas M. DaviseCharles Sanford Norman rEliezer 1Lee -Slayton orris 'Johnson Joseph Van Riper ares Kline Robert Williamson Marvin Koacker William 1.. Worboy Women Assistants on the Business Staff. Marian Atran Mary Jane Kenan Dorothy Jloomgarden. Virginia MConb Laura Codling lice McCully Ethel onstas pSylvia Miller Josephiie Convisser Ann Verner Bernice Glaser Dorothea Waterman Anna Goldberger Joan Wiese WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 19304 Night Editor-WM. C. GENTRY ILL-PLASTERED GRETTO. Last fall when the announce- ment was made that a thorough 'overhauling of the president's mansion was imminent before President Ruthven took possession, it was expected that at least the front of the house could, and would be, made a bit more presentable than it was at that time. However, to date, our hopes have not been justified, and alumni visitors last week-end commented upon the fact. idn Certainly, with the large building and grounds department the Uni- versity employs, isome manner of improvement could be made, over present conditions. Light spots of cement give an air of an ill-plas- tered ghetto, weather-stained win- dow sills resemble those of an an- cient farmhouse, and the streaks left after the removal of the blinds furnish, to be sure, a symmetrical black pattern which some may ad- mire, but which adds nothing to the attractiop of the residence. Aside from the planting of shrubs, and Me performing of rather dubious experiments upon the Romance Languages building, it would not seem highly improb- able that some of the University workmen could take a few days off to make the home of the institu- tion's president a bit more pleas- ing in appearance to both visitors and students. 0 FURTHER PROOF. Anent the plea made for the in- stitution of higher entrance re- quirements for the University in these columns recently, it may be apropos to notice a comparison of the number of dismissals becausel of academic deficiencies from the University of Illinois and from Princeton. In Illinois, one of the larger state universities and not unlike Michigan in prestige, entrance re- ouiiremnts. a nd scholastfic stand1- Princeton show that in that in- stitution only 32 men out of a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,235' students were dropped because of' scholastic deficiencies. This am- ounts to approximately 1.4 per cent as contrasted with 6 per cent in the case of the large state uni- versity. Princeton entrance requirements consist of college board examina- tions as well as testimonials as to the character, habits, and morals of the applicant. Something more thaneacademic knowledge is want- ed. We do not advocate the adopt- ing of system of entrance examin- ations for this University that will correspond with the college board examinations used in many col- leges throughout the country. But a somewhat finer system of selec- tion must be adopted by Michigan as well as other state universities. The policy of state universities (which has been adopted with a view to "tolerance in obligations to the state") should be changed suf- ficiently to eliminate the majority of cases in which the individual is discouraged and sometimes disil- lusioned by his dismissal from theI University, and to do away with many of the heartaches at home because of the apparent temporary failure of the progeny. Some system of weeding out the applicants before they ever start in this business of."getting culture in the University" must be adopt- ed. It is evident that in large state universities many individual s should never be allowed to enter. Those individuals who have no business in a university should be turned away before they ever start their careers in the institution. 0 w I ' I i i i ASRTD ROLL HELP WANTED-- MALE.1 This is the last call for potential Rolls editors. Ere the week is out my' name will be laid to rest among the ashes of former Rolls editors and a new and younger man will take my place to carry on the great work of this department.' But who will this young man be1 The competition isstill open aral no decision will be made for a few days. Send in your column! They have been pouring in here at the rate of one a day for the past two days but I can handle 'em. Send; 'em in! I see by the paper that Phi Eta Sigma, national honorary schol- astic fraternity, recently initiated 40 freshmen including President Ruthven. I'm awfully glad he made the grade. Somebody just handed be two stories from last Thursday's Daily which were checked as being prize- winners. They are. Listen: 'Since 1903 the bureau (of census) has been collecting financial statistics of all municipalities with a popula- tion of 30,000,00 or more." I.think I'll see if I can't get a job on that bureau. S* * * Here's the other (from a sports story): "Rifles, ammunition ,and officers will be furnished by the sponsors." Pretty rough on the of- ficials, don't you think? * ** LETTER FROM THE PROOF- READERS. Dear Joe: Us proofreaders is striking for more pay and less work, We are goin gto form a unon and make you slave-driving edi- tors smoke. WEATOINSHRDLU We mean busienss an dthe proff- readers are going ho be a blight on this paper til you, dirty, scound- rels, give us justis,,,,,'yhatis more you; have got to qiut making dirty cracksabout uor work in you're colum? we are gi veingyou a chance to keep DETROIT 2, PHILA. 19 your column properly read but them other editorss had better "look otu" Associate Prro fReaders Union. P.S. we don't want uor pay doub- led because: that would leaveit still two times zero is nothing any- way; Thanks, men; I'm glad you're goin gto keep Rolls free frm typo- gafical error s. . Editorial Comment COMPOUND FAILURES. (Purdue Exponent) Among some who consider them- selves trained in pedagogy there seems to be a theory that a stu- dent will study a course harder if he is made to think that he is con- tinually just on the line or below. These instructors repeatedly give difficult tests and dailies which few or none are able to pass, and I than follow up with a sermon to the effect that evidently the class is riot working. Certainly average grades should indicate what the average student can or cannot pass, and when an entire class fails a test making it necessary to use a multiplying fac- tor should be no excuse for going ahead and again giving as difficult a test. 'When a student knows that hle is only one among a whole class that has failed, he invariably as- sumes the attitude that there is no use trying any longer if the in- structor is going to continue giv- ing such exams, for he feels cer- tain that had the fault been with him alone others sho'uld have! passed. On the other hand, one or two good grades encourage him. He is proud of them, he takes an interest in the course, and feeling that he has a chance, he wants to keep up the work and have a little personal record to crow over.3 Wholesale failure of classes, how- ever, is bad because it not only has its particular toll, but it starts many on the downgoing stream who would otherwise take great in- terest in the course, and because the theory that it induces more intensive studying is seldom real- ized. 0 TIMELY TIMELENESS. (Christian Science Monitor) "Would you," asks Dr. Gilbert N. Lewis of the University of Califor- nia, "believe that events now trans- piring are among the factors which decided Caesar to cross the Rubi- con?" Don't answer too quickly, and is no catch in the question, and those Who reply in the negative may sometimes find themselves in the class of the scoffers who pun- ished Galileo and the doubters who thought the Wright brothers just a little bit unballanced. Now, Dr. Lewis himself is not certain that he believes entirely in what he has suggested, but unquestionably he is touching the outer nebulae of a big idea. Dr. Lewis speaks not as a philosopher, but as a distin- guished physicist, and when he ad- vances this rather startling deduc- tion he contends that he is only applying to human affairs the con- clusions which are being soundly established in physics and chemis- trv. Music And Drama !1 PROF. GERTRUDE JOHNSON. A Review. Professor Gertrude Johnson of the University of Wisconsin, ap- pearing 'last night in the second of a series of dramatic readings spon- sored by the Speech department, very splendidly introduced a play by A. A. Milne that he has declar- ed to be his best. "The Ivory Door,"' like the others, is pleasant to theI point of exasperation. It is about a king and his subjects, "people wanting to believe certain things and not wanting to believe others." The theme is something in the na- ture of "what a delicate eveanes- cent thing is truth." It is the same Milne trick one got in The Truth About Blayds.j Very subtly he starts a current of ideation .that gets you falsely in- terested in the importance of the play. He promptly abadons it for the exploitation of his real tlent- a nimble, springhtly display of honest, attractive, and very ordi- nary sentiment. Here there is con- siderable facile symbolism and oc- casional bits of sophisticated writ- ing to heighten the illusion of im- portance. But undoubtedly it is quite as empty as all his other plays; and of course, quite as pleas- ant. Perhaps it is more pleasant. Perhaps that's what Milne meant by calling it his best play. Prof. Johnson, in her introduc- tory remarks, I think, proved her judgment of the play by saying It "meant many things, perhaps too many things." At any rate, she read it with complete honesty, striving for and attaining the im- pression of genuineness in the part of Kink 1Ierivale, sentimentally and remorsefully musing over the peo- ple's idealisation of himself and worrying about the mystery of the Ivory Door, through which his an- cestor Kings have disappeared. Her' voice has genuineness and in her reading of the part she takes all the cadences with a spontaneity that gives the necessary illusion. Her voice also las the necessary flexibility for sharp, accurate characterization. All the other parts in the play were completely clarified by her easy adaptation i and filpppy. Being a reader, she is correctly economical about the use of facial expression and ges- ture. She employs these, for the reader, extra modes of communi- cation only when necessary. Her efforts in this line were consistent- ly verystudied and very revealing. The result of her performance of a prose play in a new confidence in the adequacy of a flexible vocal technique to' protect- all the rami- fications of a play, indeed here' rather a simple play. By careful distribution of pauses and by a subtle projection of the tone of the dialogues, she succeeds in com- municating the moods of the vari- ous scenes-a task ordinarily done in production by bits of business. Free of the task of moving around among chairs and making one's body at all times accurate, she can concentrate on the correct pointing of each line. The result is that reverence has been done to the author that he would hardly be granted in stage production. There are many things to be said in favor of the dramatic reading as a form of communication. Cer- tainly it should be more popular- particularly among students of the drama and of production-tran iit seems to be. The final readings in the present series will be Cyrano de Bergerac and King Lear-both of them undoubtedly more impor- tant than the two plays so far done. -W. J. G. - 0 RICHARD BENNETT IN SOLID SOUTH. Richard Bennett comes next week to the Shubert Lafayette in a play that has seen Chicago and is on its way to New York. Lawton Campbell 'has given him a satiric play that tears the mantle of gentle tradition enfolding the south. The aim in the writing has of course, been to specificially give free play to Mr. Bennett's particular set of powers as an actor; and his por- trayal has been very well received. From accounts of the part, it would seem to offer Mr. Bennett as good a chance for his devastating' characterisation as did Jarnegan. This time he rips through a long array of myths about the dear southland in the part of a de- scendant of a noted Civil War offi- cer, a chap that can't forget that BIG MAY SALE 20% DISCOUNT ON FRATERNITY JEWELRY Burr, Patterson & Auld 603 Church MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW EUROPE, ORIENT O ANYWHERE - AN INK AYIsTEAMSHIP -CLASS TRAVELERS CHEQUES. ETC. I ass u es WANT ADS PAY! 1111 South University Ave. % Block East of Campus i .; ... . . . ; 4"tf;;;. '! ;;. : ... - -~ 3 0 A .t T, Blow the Whistle ys d 100 Brink ~~Deicious and Refreshing r J V . .. 1 J t i Avoid that last Minute Rush and get your Theses and Reports TYPED NOW - ~t -+for thePas that rre freshes When you suffer from large and undiluted doses of your fellows. When the milk of human kindness seems to sour. Blow the whistle for a minute's "time out" on your own account, to pause and refresh yourself. In other words, go into a huddle with a glass or bottle of refreshing, delicious Coca-Cola. It will make you captain of your soul again, ready to live-or die- for the dear old alma mater. The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta. Ga. urwatjand nice-V -"Famous Sports Champoaa%.. Coca-Cola' Orchestras .is-EveryW ednestky lO:3Oto llpm. Ea *lufADaylit- 9avittg Tlime --?-CoargtO Coast'iNBC Netwoikv--a. eTS I T- l. 9 MILLION A Highl Picture shows proofreader with nose buried in paper searching for typos. Paper was handed to him by reporter whose story was ruined by double-crossing member of Proofreader's Union. There's something unjust about this kind of weather just when we're trying to brace ourselves for finals. The beautiful brass nameplates, formerly fastened to the new cam- pus lamp posts, have practically all disappeared, they tell me. Now if the boys will remove the bulbs for home use, and uproot the posts to be used as hatracks the campus will again resemble its former self. WOULDN'T SURPRISE ME. Dear Joe: I think the Chink is mistaken about the R. L. building. Outside of giving the B. and G. boys something to do, don't you think they might be preparing to move it over to Sleepy Hollow for the Cap Night bonfire? The Beachcomber. * Today the final drive will be held for the Fresh Air Camp fund. It's your last chance to help give some poor kid a happy ten days this summer. BUY A TAG! * * * (Did you say you wouldn't? Why, you skunk, you!) OVERHEARD IN A DRUG STORE. "Do you need any toothpaste?" DA Y- IT HAD TO HE GOOID -efiencyiency .. .. TO GET WHERE , , , s s ,,} 'I Lower costs Gas-fired im- mersion coil heater applied to the heating of metal clean- ing solution. IH s ! application of gas to the prob- lems of solution heating has resulted always in higher efficiency with greatly lowerd operating cost. Gas heat promotes longer tank life; its temperature is under easy and accurate control-a vital necessity in many phases of solution heating. Modern equip-, ment makes it possible to operate gas-fired solution-heating tanks far over normal ca- pacity, while modern turndown equipment provides the ultimate iln economy when tanks are idle or waiting. The free book "Gas Heat" tells you what other industries are doing with gas-fired solu- Set-up of gas-fired steam boiler and tank for solution heating.. . i i .................. 1