PAGE FOUR THE MCHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 10; 1930 Published every morning except Monday wring thie U.niversity year by the Bonrd is Contol of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editoral Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis- Y atches credited to it or not otherwise credited n 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- maaster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.os; by mall, $4. 50. Offrces: Ann Arbor Press Building, May Gad Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 2z814. 4 a t t: e t r t t c only can but will remove the con- duct of their athletic affairs from the interests which have condoned the aforenamed charges. We earn- estly look toward the day when in- tercollegiate competition will again receive the full imputation of ama- teurism which would ensue from full-fledged interest and partici- pation in managerial and adminis- trative capacities. As a corollary to the above, it is perhaps further pertinent to rec- ord the hope that the practice of re- moving scouts, sideline coaching and athletic board tighthandedness in conducting actual competition, which prevails in too few quarters, may be acceptably followed else- where. 0 5 SOASTE OLL FLOODED WITH COLUMNS. MuscAnd Drama I 0- - - - - - - 0t u %F-- 4 1 The response to my plea for try- out columns has been magnificent, and from now on Iexpect to loll at ease in the news department (my new job) while the so-called, faith- ful readers fill this space. (It won't work out that way but it's nice to think about). (Besides, the job of EDITORIAL STAFF; Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman..........George C. Tilley City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg News Editor...........Donald J. Kline Sports Editor.... .. Edward L. Warner, Jr. Women'sEditor..........Marjorie Foilmer Telegraph Editor.......Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama......William J. Gorman Literary Editor.........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor.... Robert J. Feldman Night Editors-Editorial Board Members Frank E. Cooper Henry 3. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Kauffman Walter W. Wilds Gurney .Williams Reporters Morris Alexander. Bruce J. Manley Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Sarc Margaret Mix Maxwell Bauer David M. Nichol Mary L. Behymner William Page Allan H. Berkman HowardeH. Peckham Arthur J. Bernstein Hugh Pierce S. Beach Conger Victor Rabinowits John D. Reiridel Thomas M. Cooley eannie Roberts Helen Domne Joseph A. Russell Margaret Eckels Joseph Ruwitch Catherine Ferrin Ralph R. Sachs Carl F. Forsythe Cecelia Shriver Sheldon C. Fullerton Charles R. Sprowl Ruth Gallmeyer Adsit Stewart 'Ruth Geddes S. Cadwell Swansed Ginevra Ginn Jane Thayer ack Goldsmith Margaret Thompso mily Grimes Richard L. Tobn Morris Crovermasn Robert Townsend Margaret Harris Elizabeth Valentine J. ul.'n Kennedy Harold 0. Warren, Jr. ean Levy G.'Lionel Willeas Russell E. McCracken Barbara Wright Dorothy Magee Vivian Zitnii BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising ............'1'. Hollister' Mobley Advertising...........K. ]asper H. Halverson Service...... ........... George A. Spater Circulation!................J. Vernor Davis Accounts ........... .. John R. Rose Publications............George R. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assistants James E. Cartwright Thomas Muir Robert Crawford G (eorge. Patterson Thomase. Davis Charles Sanford Norman IEliezer L ee Slayton Norris Johnson Joseph Van Riper Charles Kline Robert Williamson Marvin Kobacker William R. Worboy Women Assistants on the Business Staff. Marian Atran Mary Jane Kenan Dorothy Bloomgarden Virginia McComb Laura Codling Alice McCully Ethel Constas Sylvia Miller Josephine Convisser Ann Verner Bernice Glaser Dorothea Waterman ;Anna Goldberger Joan Wiese Hlortense (Goodinig news editor isn't the pipe might be lead to believe). youl INDIA AND INDE. PENDENCE The London Daily Mail, Britain's mouthpiece, said in a special dis-I patch from India yesterday that "16 more rioters were injured in Assam Thursday" following the ar- rest of Mahatma Gandhi by Brit- ish officials. This totals 27 fatalities and injuries which have resulted in the Indian fight for freedom from. English "tyranny." When India's "passive resist- ance" broke into an active blaze immediately after the salt law vio- lation, flaming indictments were written concerning the oppressive manner in which India Was being treated, the grasping way in which British controllers had squeezed all semblance of liberty from the people's hands. There was no con- sideration of the fact that India may not have been ready for in- dependence; there was no indica,- tion or proof that the followers of Gandhi were capable of running their own affairs. The fault, therefore, was doubly placed-with the India leaders and people in general for attempting to overrule British domination by mass methods rather than through cool, well-thought out diplomacy; there was also the consideration that British inactivity and political reticence were partially responsiblE for the outbreaks. It is not our contention that In- dia is on the wrong side of the fence in attempting to gain a morE independent status; that questior is one which is possible to solve only through long, difficult re. search and experiment. It is oui contention, however, that India a; a whole and England as a whol are decidedly wrong in theirre- spectiive attitudes of bulb-headed- ness. Why should England inactive. ly disregard the India questior when the lives and property o hundreds of Europeans as well a, Englishmen are at stake? On th< other hand, why should India at tempt, through mass impudence to gain a freedom which would bi doubtfully valuable? England should clamp down im mediately and halt the unobstruct ed rioting and destruction of live and property with the utmost us{ of its authority. India should com to the quickest possible terms ani its leaders comprehend the futilit of "passive resistance" which i not only annoying to England, bu utterly useless in any motive to ward independence. With thes faults corrected, England would b able to solve her 400,000,000 prob lems. 0 - Anyhow, let's get on with this. Here's the result of the combined efforts of Steve and Stella. It won't fill a column but they at least made a stab at it. * * * REBUTTERING TOASTED ROLLS. We highly approve of the man-c ner in which the Fresh Air CampX drive served a double purpose. Of t course its ulterior purpose was to( help needy kids to get together for't the summer, but it's serving aE more immediate benefit. Picture. this: A young couple sitting in a Sandwiche Shoppe. She, looking coy, sported an unpretentious scar-t let tag entitled, FOR NEEDY BOYS. He looked very noble with a pure white one-GLAD TO HELP. * * *: As long as we're still in the Uni- versity and we can't do anything about the weather, we wonder why we can't model in the sculptural school-there is one, you know. Of course we know our figures aren't so hot but we are - climatically speaking. * ** * Well, the finals are less than a month away. Might we offer a lit- tle improvement on Shakespeare (or was it Will Rogers?). "Every man for himself and may the dean get the hindmost." ** * We see that Cap night was a suc- cess. Proving that although the pot may be :an insignificant piece of felt it does have its blaze of glory. * * * The accordian-pleated soap dish goes to the roommate for the r week's worst pun. Yesterday she s went horseback riding. Today she e is singing "Why Am I So Black and TONIGHT: Second presentation of Lennox Robinson's "The White- headed Boy," directed by the au- hor in the Mendelssohn theatre, beginning at 8:30. THE WHITEHEADED BOY 1)1RECTE I) BY LNNOX ROBINSO(N The Cast Hannah.............redac Jane ....................I elen Carm Mrs. Geogegan.......lorence Tennant Kate ..................Merle Elsworth D~oniough.................. Joe I n netll Baby............ldean L omt Aunt Flllii ...... .....ildred Todd George. Palmer Bollinger Denis.Charles F. Holden Peter................Franklin Comins D~elia................ Evelyn Gregory Duffy ............Robert K. Adams A Review "Whatever is in this (column) is quite unnecessary." It is extremely pleasant to get both drama and ac- ting that manages to be funny with- out italics. For the entirely authen- tic comedy, played with energy and exactness, we received last night, we are in debt to Lennox Robin- son, both the author and the direc- tor of the play. The experience by1 which we acquired the debt was so enjoyable that it seems "unneces- sary" to define it. Mr. Robinson, in his writing and in his direction, definitely showed Ann Arbor a new method of pro- duction of comedy. Actors were made to fix attention on the words they were saying rather than on their antics while saying them. Ef- fects were subordinated to effect. Mr. Rgbinson's direction is smooth andlevel; he is not anxi- ous to make points at every mo- ment.=There is a temperate repres- sion of the details-details of ex- cessive grimacing or wild pacing- ordinarily associated with "act- ing." All motion is quietly and in- telligently'regulated-never the un- intelligent haphazard of absolute naturalness but never, never the ordinary theatric and artificial ex-i cess of activity. Much ,of his comedy in produc- tion Mr. Robinson gets pictorially- by stage-pictures full of explicit drollery because achieved with such naturalness and significance. He was careful too of the eager faces that he employed; he never let them become overpossessed with expressive detail, disconcerting at- I I ings account. Your first wise step is to get a deposit book. Ann Arbor Savings Ban Main at Huron 707 North University I 11 I /'= Blue?" Guess saddle hold you! SATURDAY, MAY 10, :930 Night Editor: HAROLD O. WARREN AMATEURISM TO THE FORE Undergraduate efforts now under way to repair the damaged ath- letic relations between Harvard and Princeton evince highly signi- ficant signs that amateurism may yet play an integral part in the conduct of intercollegiate athletics. In attempting to bring about mu- tual relations in athletics again, the Harvard Crimson and the Daily Princetonian have simultaneously made initial overtures, reflected the cordial good feeling of the present college generations which has re- placed the ill will that precipitat- ed the rupture in 1926, and both have insisted that the remaining differences preventing immediate resumption of competition are merely technical matters of policy, neither fundamentally divergent nor irreconcilable. In thus taking-.coptrol of a situa- tion which threatened, if neglected much longer, to become a perman- ent estrangement, the student bodies have compelled their re- spective athletic boards in control tq weld their differences and come to amicable terms. At the present writing, the only impediment to a rapprochement is laid to the fact that Harvard will agree to resump- tion only on the short-term dual contract which is the basis of Har- vard's relations with all colleges but Yale; while on the other hand, Princeton desires that relations be resumed on the basis of the old "Big Three" agreement, with Yale as a party to any arrangement made between the other two insti- tutions. While this opposition, coupled with attendant ill feeling between the two undergraduate bodies, produced the original breach, it is our prediction that the genuine optimism and determined friendliness now prevailing will prove a deciding increment in cre- ating the new entente cordiale. ], r! s ! I ,' ' :. 1 t t l s i., e e , e .1 e .1 Editorial Comment 'GOING BACK, GOING BACK' (From the Daily Princetonian) Dr. William Mather Lewis of La- fayette University has announced his plans for the second annual session of the alumni college which will be held at Easton during the two weeks following Commence- ment. Dr. Lewis has so far departed from the safe and customary atti- tude as to have declared, "We must get away from the camel theory in education which holds that a man can absorb enough intellectual training dur- ing college days to last him the rest of his life. Like the storage battery company, the effective col- lege must furnish its patrons with recharging service." ,Determined to seek the efficiency of the most modern storage battery companies, Lafayette inaugurated the alumni college. It was a move filled with daring. Among the most widely deplored problems of the American college the band of those often obstreperous, proprietary hangers-on, the Alumni, has loom- If we get this column our motto will be "With justice to All, and Malice Toward None." Meaning that we'll make our puns justice terrible as possible without hav- ing people malice. We mean, maul us-but you get the idea. STEVE AND STELLA. AND THE CHINK OFFERS THIS . AS A STARTER. I hope all the scoffers are fully aware of the penomenal success of the Coatless Shirt campaign. The noble work of the He-Man's club was not in vain. * * * I5ee by the papers that the sen- iors may now purchase their caps and gowns. In self defense I hasten to challenge one and all to prove that I even hinted they couldn't. * * * Complaints have been rolling in from every side that it is unfair of the faculty to hold classes in the morning when that is the only time it is possible to sleep in this weather. That, fellows, is down- right ingratitude for the kindness they eshow in providing such an opportunity. * '* * The Rolls statistician has favor- ed me with the information that if the B. & G. boys had devoted half the time they spent digging ditches to assisting in the construction of the Law Club, it would now be I 34,000,000 1-2 stories in height and have a sufficient cubic content to house all of good kind Mr. Tillot- son's friends and relatives at a football game. Which, by the way, would be an advantage. Now that they've figured out a handy, system by which we can sign up for a lot of courses before we know whether we'll be able to take them or not, why don't they concentrate on a plan for passing the ones we already have?. * * * LEARN SOMETHING EACH DAY. tempts at deepening character; he rather gave them a single fixed ex- pression - brilliantly summing up temperament-an openeyed caress on the Mother's face, a worried, harassed, planning look on Aunt Ellen, stupid wonder on Peter's face and so on. Mr. Rbbinson's manner, true to the Abbey- tradition, uses reti- cence, moderation, suspended em-, phasis. This quietness attained clear and definable results in exper- ience-a fine, quiet drollery that one enjOed so immensely that to guffaw would seem to sin. The de- tails by which this clarity of ex- perience was achieved were so nu- merous and so clearly the work of a directing genius that effort at description of them results in these disjointed notes. The obvious de- light of a large audience was grate- ful testimony of the richness of the- gift Mr. Robinson gave the stu- dents he worked with and the au- dience he played before. The students in the cast worked with energy and caution within the author's atmosphere and intention. They gave him good solid acting with not the slightest deviation! into the softer, easier antics of the farce plane. There was no breaking with the director's deliberate ac- cent, not the slightest evidence of extravagant energy of personal personality wishing to make itself known. Play Production can take satisfaction in the fact that they contributed so honestly and sound- ly to the debt they owe Mr. Rob- inson.1 Mr. Holden's Denis, the prodigy; turned prodigal, a part that a' craftsman would surely have either decorated or distorted, was done honestly and attractively. Miss Ten-I nant's mother was, properly con- cerned; Miss Tennant very subtly and carefully made fine pictures, bending over and stroking her whiteheaded boy. Mildred Todd's Aunt Ellen-again a part that a craftsman could make uproarious- . was done with technical reservei that emphasized her drollery. This was conscious cooperation with Mr. Robinson for Miss Todd has hither- to proven the richness of her crafts-. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, D.D., Min- ister; Rev. Samuel J. Harrison, B.D., Associate Minister;. Mr. Ralph R. Johnson, Student Di. rector; Mrs. Ellura Winters, Ad. visor of Women Students. 10:30 A. M.-Morning- Worship. "MOTHER POWER." Dr. Stalk- er. 12:00 M.-Three Discussion Groups at Wesley Hall. 6:00 P. M.-"COLLEGIATE HANDICAP," Mr. Robert Win. ters. 7:30 P. M.-Evening Worship. "THE CLIMB TO GOD," Rev. Mr. Harrison. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH On East Huron, below State Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister Howard R. Chapman, Minister for Students. 9:45 A. M.-The Church School. Mr. Wallace Watt, Supt. 9:45 A. M.-University Group at Guild House. Mr. Chapman. 10:45 A. M.-Church Worship. Mr. Sayles. MOTHER'S DAY SERVICE 5:30 P. M.-Friendship Hour. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division Sts. Merle H. Anderson, Minister Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwell, Counsellor for University Women. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "A Mother in Shunem." 12:00 Noon-Student Class, Prof. H. Y. McClusky.. 615 E. University Dial 3779 5:30 P. M.-Social Young People.' Hour forl 7:30 P. M.-Sunday Services. Rabbi Fink will speak on "The Jew in a Christian Environment" in the chapel of the Michigan League. 8:30 P. M.-Open House at the Foundation. 6:0 P. M.-Young People's Meet- ing. Leader: Oscar Maddaus. TUNE Sunday IN! Morning Serw. of the DBTROIT UNITY CENTER br-adcass from The Detroit Civic Thet 11:30A M.Esawn Sed. Tin 100A..Central Stand. Tm.* WJR EVERY TkiURSDAY EV'G (Beginning Jan. 9, 1930) LECTURE ON PRINCIPLES OF SUCCESSFUL LIVING Sewing forth the Principles by whichs. amn may unfoldi n his lie th Hiealth. Puace and Proaperity hichW Gad has provided. 1:5P.M.Easw-n Stand.ITmo 10 05 P.M.CenalStand.T FIRST CONGREGATIONAL State and William Rev. Allison Ray Heaps, Minister Sunday, May 11 10:45 A. M.-Mbning Worship. "The One Touch More." 5:30 P. M.-Student Fellowship. 6:00 P. M.-Fellowship Supper. 6:30 P. M.-Dean W. R. Hum. phrey's topic: "Priests and Kings." ,. HILLEL FOUDATION 6:30 P. M.-Devotional The question of student ships in class room and pus will be discussed. Meeting. relation. on cam- BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH (Evangelical Synod of N. A.) Fourth Ave. between Packard and William Rev. Theodore R. Schmale 9:00 A. M.-Bible School 10:00 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "Pentecost and Christian Unity.' 11:00 A. M.-German Service. 7:00 P. M.-Young People's League. L f Il BE CONSISTENT IN YOUR RELIGION ATTEND CHURCH REGULARLY 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. (Kindrgarten at 11 o'clock.) 11:00 A. M.-Morning Prayer. Ser- mon by Mr. Harris. 11 ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St. at Fifth Ave. E. C. Stellihorn, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Sunday School. FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A. M-Regular Morning Service. Sermon topic: "Adam and Fallen Man." ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty Sts. C. A. Brauer, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-German Service. 11 i