THE M ICH1TCAN DAILY' THURSDAY, MAY 15, I93T- .4 Published every iorning except Monday iring the University year by th oard ain ontt 0l of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial sociaton. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled Dthe use for republication of all news dis- atches credited to it or not otherwise credited n this paper and the local news published erein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Iichigan, as second class matter. Special rate Ipostae granted by Third Assistant Post aseGeneral.i Subscription by carrier, $4.o; by maai, Offices: Ann Arbor Press Buildlng. May.. Bard Street. Phones.Editorial, 49s: Business, 21214 EDITORIAL STAF Telephone 4925 1 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's Editor............Marjori Follmer Telegraph Editor.......Cassain A. Wilsot Music and Drama.......William . Gorman Literary Editor.........Lawrence R. Klein Assistant City Editor ... Robert J. Feldman Night Editors-Editorial Board Members Frank E. Cooper Henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloes Charles R. Kauffman Walter W. Wild Gurney Williams Reporters Morris Alexander. Bruce J. Manley Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Bare Margaret Mix Maxwell Bauer David M. Nichol Mary L. Behymer William Page Allan H. Berkman Howard H. Peckham Arthur J Bernstein Hugh Pierce S. Beach Conger hVtorhD. Ra Reindel Thomas .Cooley jeannie Roberts Helen Doniine 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 CGeddes S. Cadwell Swsnso Ginevra Ginn Jane Thayer ack Goldsmith Margaret Thompson Emily Grimes Richard L. Tobin Morris rCrovemas Robert Townsend" Margaret Harris Elizabeth Valentine l Culm Kennedy Harold 0. Warren, Jr a Le. crce G. Lionel Widlens D E. BacrackenBrbara Wright Dorothy Magee Vivian, Zim'is BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR., Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising ......... .T. Hollister Mable Advertising ............ Kasper H. Halversor Service ......... ....George A. Spatet Circulation ... .. ... J. Vernor Davi Accounts...........John R. Rosc Publications... eorge R. Hamiltor Bushiess. Secretary-Mary Chase Aastants James E. Cartwright Thomas Muir obert Crawford George R. Patterson Thomas 11t. Davis Charles Sanfor~d Norman Eliezer, Iee Slayton Norris Johnson. Joseph Van Riper Charles Kline. *Rabert Williamson Marvin ,Kobacker William R. Worboy Women Assistants on the Busines Staff. Marian Atran Mary Jane Kenan Dorothy Bloomgarden Virginia McComb Laura Codling Alice McCully Ethel Constas Sylvia Miller osephine Convisser Ann Verner Bernice Glaser Dorothea Waterman Anna Golderger Joan Wiese Hiortense Gooding ACHIEVEMENT. - - Occasionally, in the history of a OAST D ROLL Music And Drama city, one man may stand out, _ _ through years of concerted effort THIS IS toward one definite goal, as some- TONIGHT: The second May one. to be admired and respected, MY FAREWELL Fesival Concert including perform- someone in whom the confidence - COLUMNances of Honegger's King David of the student body may be placed. I see by the papers that I have and Bach's Magnificat; beginning Last Sunday morning, Dr. Arthur Isanother b thcaestat I've promptly at 8:15.e W. Stalker, of the First Methodist job, which means I've church, unofficially told his ,ion- simply got to stop fooling around _ gregation that his twenty-five here and get down to work, so this years of service were at an end. will be my last effort. FIRST FESTIVAL CONCERT. The Friday night preceding he had * * * A Review by William J. Gorman. officially handed in his resignation (Sneer from Lark: "Oh, yeah? to the board of trustees of the You may thinks it's your last col- Definitely outstanding in the first church acompanied by a short, umn but I know different. Once concert last night was the excel- concise statement of facts. unbtIko ifrn.Oc "I am resigning," said Dr. Stalk- a Rolls edict, always a Rolls addict. lence of Miss Dux's Mozart singing er, "because I am convinced that I I know. For years I was a slave Granted the distinction, it is the owe it to you, my congregation, to to the column and then I decided performer rather than the instru leave the leadership of your great to break the shackles. But could performe rather thaheistr enterprise to younger and stronger I? No! I found myself gripped in ment, the voice, which proves mor hands." the insidious clutches of the de- interesting. It is a feeling simila Dr. Stalker's "great enterprise" vastating monster, and try as I may to the one I had about Claudi is no myth. He has built up his I cannot rid myself of the all too I Muzio last winter. Miss Dux's voice congregation enormously since his frequent desire to write a column. ! now at least, is not notable for the arrival in 1905 to take over the Joe, you are a lost soul. I pity duties of pastor. But the mere fact , richness of its possibilities bu of growth is aside from the point. you.) 4 rather for her sensitive employ In building, through hard, perser- vering effort, the respect and con- Just the same I'm going to put ; ment of it--clear indication of fidence of the entire community, up an awful fight. sensitive intelligence in which on Dr. Stalker has given something in *"* becomes interested. Her voice i return. He has been a leader in a Speaking of Lark, he and W. J. not powerful, agile or impressiv worthy movement; he has had Gorman, the Music and Drama not powe , agile orimpres courage enough to face the situa- king, played a hard set of tennis Miss Dux doesn't astonsh one a tion which is usual in a university yesterday which was reported by many sopranos can and do by th city-that of antagonistic religious Cal Amity as being a humdinger. indefatigable zeal with which sh feeling. And now, after he has suc- The play by play account is too varies color ualit or modes o cessfully "defended the faith" he vais oo, ultyo odso resigns in order that the work al- long and nauseating to be run here vocalization. She never surprises g but Cal says that Mr. Gorman her voice is easilyredicatable, be ready accomplished may be car-s y p ried on by "stronger and younger "complimented the superior sports- cause limited. She doesn't striv hands." manship and ability of his oppon- for the illusion of ecstacy, if on Forty-six years ago Dr. Stalker ent, who concurred." (may call it that; for her voic became a minister. Over half that wouldn't sustain her. . time he has spent in working for I can't imagine Lark having any Yet all these negative remark. Ann Arbor and her interests, aid- ability but then it's none of my are intended to be appreciative be ing civic enterprises that needed a business anyway. cause her genuine artistry and in helping hand, creating a feeling of 1 * : * telligence adapts her faculties per social understanding between mem- From Tuesday's Student council y bers of the many races of people str:"ypoiigta!vr fectly. She. has absorbed and recog. er oed athe man eracs pstory: By providing that every !nized in her voice all that intelli enrolled at the University. student who registers sign his ence can ive it Complete He may now survey his work eneca-iv i.Copetl proudly as do those whom he has name on a slip which will be refer- aware of herself, a mature artis served since the beginning of the red to when he votes next week, it she is capable of the consummat sresncethry beginnig dof the is thought that dual and illegal ease needed to sing Mozart. B present century. He lays down his voting will be eliminated. All stu- case sheed has integencar.e. yr dents intending the chief of the knows her voice, she is suave an tiha a nmgetre It be car- famous antarctic expedition is flexible enough to project Mozart e ried on unimpaired. It is now up travelin g aboard the liner, Rangi- to the "younger and stronger" tiki." intricate gracefulness. She ca hands, to whom he has willed his ,ik*igive full attention and clarity b "great enterprise," to continue the ,the individual note and yet attai task which he has so nobly begun, rut, tut The minute they start fluency. She keeps her voice-qua fachievementtalking about dual voting some- ity homogeneous in all register for his is real body changes the subject. and in all intensities. She has 0 beautiful, delicate pianissimo. Th SWELL IDEA. point being made is that she sing is The Southern Methodists have While lying in bed yesterday Mozart as beautifully as it has bee charged their Cannon with gamb- morning waiting for the alarm to sung here in some years-an achi ling. Now, we suppose there will ring so I could get up, I figured out vement to be enthusiastic about. be canonical rumblings, a swell way to keep from over- Percy Grainger still remains L. G. BALFOUR CO. 1121 South University FRATERNITY JEWELERS Badges--Favors-Programs Corkey Stanard, Mgr. WANT ADS PAY! TYPEWRITING and MIMEOGRAPHING A specialty for twenty years. Prompt service.. Experienced op- erators.. Moderate rates. O. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 _r 'i1. "! TOURISTS THIRD LASs ANY LINE.ANY COUNTRY One Way, Round l Cotr a Real Low Price TvvU 1 300K HOW ' AHThORIZED STEAEIIP AC . 9. G. KEBLER, At Li.o 641 E H4ONA. AN A R . - e eI r a If ,e it - a s e. s ie e f ; - ve Ze e ks e- a- r- - I :ly t, ,te e- id 's .'t7 M= 11111111111 Ililli 11111M 4 [ J Suits of Quality New Spring Stock $2950 k oti White twill knickers . $4.50 Linen knickers . . $3.50 Flannels . . . . . $7.50 Sport oxfords in the new $8.00 two-tans combination VWAG11EI-&COMAHY Jfor Then §c>-c &Ijtne 16&48 p- IIIIIIII LM '__,,, in to int l- i r's a! e gsl en # ,e- a) B ONDS I RKeal estate !governmentindustrial Municipal Foregn Public Utility ' RIENDS, RELATIVES and INITIATIVE Of 51 men in our Training School- 26 had their attention directed to the investment business by friends or relatives 20 decided to investigate it on their own initiative 7 0! . . 6 : ,y t , .. I THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1930 Night Editor-BEACH CONGER, Jr. DUST OFF THE STANDARDS. The familiar educational contro- versy between mortar and men as prime needs of the university seems not only abated, but definitely tucked away. President Ruthven, in what purported itself to be aE glimpse into the Michigan of the future, recently declared that since, the major building requirements were cared for, first attention would henceforth be given to edu- cational problems, methods of in- struction, curriculum revisions and matters of personnel. It seems always to have been a difficult task for university admin- istrators to ignore the allurements of surrounding themselves and their charges with more Gothic and ivy. The less corporeal enter- prises of improving the lot of fac- ulty and students *have too often been motivated rather by pressure of exigencies than by pursuit of an academic ideal. There is little' prophylactic in spasmodic doses of isolated treatment for the cure of chronic educational ailments. Michigan's plight, however, if the several incipient improvements now begun are carried to fruition, seems on the point of alleviation. When Dr. Ruthven was made Pres- ident last fall, he fell heir to a cur- iously confounded situation in the administrative affairs of the Uni- versity. Many building projectsI left pending since President Bur- ton's untimely death coupled with the well-intentioned but poorly and! half executed educational plans of Dr. Little produced inestimably great hodge-podge. While Presi- dent Ruthven has been concerned with the necessary house-cleaning, professors' salaries, reforms in in- struction and curricula and ad- missions problems have been shelv- ed and allowed to receive what benefits they could from the*"rest 0o With only two pseudo-importantj campus political plums remainingI to be picked by campus politicians, it is remarkable that so great a hubbub can be raised over such de- generate trivialities as nominations and registration. o- We nominate for next year's winner of the Pulitzer award for' reporting-the man who would re- port an unbiased story of the In- dian situation.f Editorial Comment I o --o ALAS AND ALACK. (From the New York World) When Vassar College girls come to town and give a concert in which Palestrina and Bach are sung in Latin, the height of some- thing or other has been reached, and it is time to call a halt. The thing had its beginning, as we re- call, when Dr. Archibald T. Davi- son took charge of the Harvard Glee Club about ten years ago and immediately began to turn things upside down. Instead of teaching the songs that college glee clubs had sung for years, he put the boys on Bach, Mozart, Handel, Brahms and the two Scarlattis, and before long the campus was reverberating to strange Latin and still stranger polyphony. Oddly enough, it worked. The boys liked it, and for the first time the club had a waiting list, instead of having to send out a bush- whacker to round up a quorum for rehearsals; the public liked it, and, instead of being sparsely filled with loyal old grads, the houses were crowded, and often sold out. Itj was but a few years, of course, be-, fore most colleges had followed suit, even Vassar. But alas and alack. All the old spirit has de- parted from college singing; the glee clubs are indistinguishableI from the Schola Cantorum andl other such choruses; to hear the' "Owl and the Pussycat," "Kentucky Babe," or a good rousing football sleeping and missing classes. Here's very satisfactory, if not major, pi- the dope: After shutting off the anist. He is always fluent in }linej alarm, place the left foot through and clear in articulation. Inj the bars at the head of the bed,! talking, about Grainger's playing double the right foot under the there is no worrying about the body, hang the head over the side mysteries of touch that gives full of the bed and push both thumbs and more than full utterance to a between the spring and mattress. score. He is merely lucid with a In just one minute you'll find this fine nimbleness of technique. There: so d uncomfortable you'll be is no violence or boldness in his mighty glad to get up, I'll tell the metres but they are always auth- cockeyed world. entic. Always there is an effective *dash in his style, a personal fervour Only trouble, of course, is that being communicated; but it is -done 1 you have to hear the alarm in the for the most part by indication; in first place which most of don't do his approach to rhythms and son- it. orities he seems bold and striking but his technique is not complete' Somebody, according to the clas-I or brilliant enough to sustain him. sifted column, has lost a "Peal His performance of the Carpenter necklace." You know, the kind Concertino was quite entertaining, that clanks. Keep your ears open, There is a traveling salesman jov- gents; a reward is offered. iality and garrulity meant to reach * M*( only the epidermis about most of Yes, sir, I repeat: This is my last this Carpenter music not too dis- column. And I'd like to take this similar to Graigner's own mildly opportunity of thanking everybody sophisticated comments on folk- for the encouragement, razzing, songs. At any rate, Grainger was knocks and boosts that have made sympathetic in interpretation writing the column a perfect gripe, though frequently without the per- Nearly seventy readers have con- cussive power the scove obviously tributed to the column since I took calls for. Carpenter writes decora- it over last December, and some tive music suggesting rather than of them have written as many as expressing emotion in its toying a dozen letters. And right here with orchestra and piano. In a good I'd like to say that, contrary toIperformance like it received from popular opinion, I never made up Stock and Grainger, the music has any of the letters that have ap- an engaging humour. peared in the column this year. Grainger's playing of the Franck You can believe it or not, but I was quite satisfactory too. In this must establish some alibi for the composition of Franck's, perhaps drivel that has appeared from time more than anywhere else in his l to time. (Like today, for instance, work, one feels Franck has attain- hey?) ed a genuine, reliable spirituality rather than sterility or intoxication OVERHEARD IN A with the idea of spirituality. As LIVERY STABLE. nowhere else the score realizes and "Do you want an English sad- exhausts the intentions. Grainger's dle or one with a horn on it?" lucidity becomes quite adequate. "Gimme the English; I'm not go- It is almost a truism to say that ing to be in any traffic." Frederick Stock at all times has the * * * intellectual grasp of his duty. This (That was overheard several makes him the most completely years ago but-anything for a satisfactory accompanist in the laugh, or anyway almost anything.) country. But frequently one feels * that there isn't the physical under- Well, the seniors swang out - standing to counterbalance his in- 4 swunged out-did their stuff Tues- s tellect. Perhaps this is due to pos-F day afternoon and it must be stat- sessing a somewhat poorer orche- ed, to the everlasting credit of the tra than any of the other major class of 1930, that most of them ones in the country. At any rate, managed to find Hill auditorium. when given forms by Tchaikovsky "The great army of the unemploy- through which to express a diffuse,; IT is a tribute to the investment business that so large a part of those entering it do so at the suggestion of older and more experienced heads. It is no less significant that an increasing number of alert, active- minded college men are choosing this field as a result of their own initiative. Both are as they should be. When a young man enters a business or profession, he makes an important investment of his time and energies. Those early years may give him the momentum to carry him through a successful career. If, on the other hand, he wakes up after several years to the fact that he has chosen a business that does not fit, or one that has limited oppor- tunities, he must begin all over again- and from a standing start. It will pay you to know as much about different occupations as possible. Before you go out to find your first position, know what different occupations require and what they offer. Among others, investigate the investment business as a possible career. We shall be glad to help you. Based on our extensive experience in the under- writing and distribution of sound bonds for investment, we have prepared a book- let of special interest to college men, called Tle Bond Business. Write for a copy. ,ti, 11 HA LSEY, STUlART & CO. INCORPORATED CHICAGO, tot Sou th La Salle Street . NEW YORK, 35 Wal Street AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CITIES To increase your knowledge of sound investment and of the investment business, listen to the Old Counsellor every Wednesday evening on the Halsey, Stuart & Co. radio program .. Over a Coast to Coast network of 37stations associated with the National Broadcasting Company. { 1 . .,....{ x 111111 f. try _. J . .. ,: , Now eres a cereal 4 that can talk! FOR a fact, Kellogg's Rice Krispies actually crackle out loud in milk or cream. That's how crisp they are. And what a taste! Golden-toasted, delicious rice. The cheer leader of any breakfast! Ask that Rice Krispies be served at your fraternity eat= ing house. Call for them at the campus restaurant. An ideal treat for a late bed-time snack. Easy to digest. Extra delicious with fruits or honey added. - * All .1 The most popular cereals served --Rd