;- mr-' R7 T'F^ :- - V - - -w w W - YWW v-w-v - W - VW'VVVWW ~--~- - - - -w w w v- v - - - w w V W~~W PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN nATT y 1s eti +s i i ir stiiti+i w a ww w }ter 111 s 1, iHF 171 CV A. 1r V A t' r~A ..,1TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1930 Published every morning exeept Mondayr Suring the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conferenc Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis- atches credited to it or not otherwise credited nthis paper and ythe local news published herein. Entered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate Of postage granted by Third Assistant Post. toaster General. Subscription by carrier. $4.0e; by sail, 04 o-. (ffrices :Ann Arbor Press Building, May-1 hard Street. Phontes: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21r4. EDITORIAL STAFF, Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman........George C. Tiley1 City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg News Editor................Donald J. Kline Sports Editor......Edward L. Warner, Jr. W omen's Editor.......... .Marjorie Yollmet Telegraph Editor.......Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drana......WilliamJ. Gorman Literary Editor......... Lawrence R. Klein' ,Assistant City Editor. .. . Robert J. Feldman Night Editors-Editorial Board Memb~ers Frank E Cooper henry J. Merry William C. Gentry Robert L. dloss Charles R. Kauffman Walter W. Wild Gurney Williams Reporters Morris Alexander. Bruce J. Manley j Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Bare Margaret Mix Maxwell Bauer David M. Nicmol Mary L. B3ehymer William Page Allan H. Berkman Howard H. Peckham Arthur J. Bernstein Ilugh Pierce .Barth onger Victor Rabinowt ThoaM. Cooley Jeannie Roberts bs Helen 1Domine Josep~h A. Russell Margaret Eckels Joseph Ruwitch Catherine Ferrin Ralph R. Sachs Carl F. Forsythe Cecelia Shriver Sheldon C. Fullerton Charles R. Sprowl RuthGallmeyer Adsit Stewart Ruth Geddes S. Cadwell Swanadd Ginevra Ginn Jane Thayer ack Goldsmith Margaret Thompo Emily Grimes' Richard L. Tobin Morris Coverma Robert Townsend Margaret Harris Elizabeth Valentine Cul tn Kennedy Harold O. Warren, Jr. cfelan Levy G. Lionel Willens ussell EMcCracken Barbara Wright Dorothy Magee Vivian Zix.is BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising ........... T. Iollister Mabley Advertising ............Kasper I-. Halverson Service.................. George A. Spater Circulation ................. J. Vernor Davis Accounts...................John R. Rose PublicationsG............George R. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assistanvs James E. Cartwright Thomas Muir Robert Crawford George R. Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford N~orman' Eliezer JLee 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 Const-s Sylvia Miller I osephine Convisser An n Verner Bernice Glaser r Iorothea Waterman Anna Goidherger Joan Wiese Hortense Goodiug I machine does not appear to have an opportunity to get votes. Are the monied interests in control? Two plans have been advanced whereby the situation might be remedied. The first is to limit by law the amount which a candidate may spend in running for office. This, however, would not help the * TASED ROLL A DECOMPOSITE COLUMN.j Here I am back from the north-j Music and Drama 0 - li TONIGHT: First performance by Play Production of "Jonica Starrs" by Elizabeth W. Smith, in University Hall auditorium, at 8:15. poorer candidates. The second; ern wilds, feeling about half as de- plan advocates a government fund, lighted-if any- as ever to be going from which expenses of all candi- to school these last weeks. One dates are to be paid through gov- bright spot on the horizon is that ernment officials. Both plans aret highly theoretical, but logical. Un- the Rolls prophesyer seems to have til, however, some method is de- been absolutely flawless in its fore- veloped that will check the orgy of casts. You may remember that I spending that accompanies the foretold freezing, weather until election of the people's represen- shortly before exams and 90 de- tatives, it will appear that votes are being bought and sold, and grees from then on. My wildest elections will not constitute the dreams seem to be fulfilled. 3 expression of the people's choice. o Campus Opinion Cotributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than loo works of possible. Anonymous coA- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial I opinion of The Daily.! JEWS PROTEST PALESTINE BAN. To the Editor: There came in The Detroit Free Funny how the boys get re- ligion about this time of year, though. I went to one of my lectures for the second time this semester and found that fully half of those taking the course were there. Most of them had even arrived a bit early so as to get to sleep be- fore the discourse started. One of them was conscious, how- ever, as may be seen by the Press newspaper, the issue of May following, although I have not 30, a notice under the above title, checked up on the figures suf- that "two hundred Jewish organi- ficiently to guarantee their ac- zations will meet Tuesday (today) curacy. I will assume that to adopt resolutions of there was no foul play, and t that Elmer really did stay against the suspension of Jewish awake all that time, impossible immigration to Palestine, by the as it may seem. British colonial office." For this, Here's the story: we like to remind those two hun- dred organizations that as much Dear Dan: as they are anxious to deprive the At the last ec lecture, I timed Palestine Arabs of their majority the prof. He spent 38 minutes rights, by intluxing their country ; looking over at the left hand side with a dissatisfied and heterogene- of the room, 10 minutes at the ous class of scattered Jews, the . h Aras temslve ae eualy ax-right hand side, and two minutes Arabs themselves are equally anx- at his notes. Boy, these co-eds. ious to defend their country We got out ten minutes early!! against any such danger. Elmer. We will let the world judge be- tween us - the Arabs choose to live peacefully in their, own land; By the way fellows, won't forget but the Jews cross thousands of the competition. That puts Elmer miles, in order to satisfy the whim within four accepted contributions of such organizations, by attempt- of an assistant editorship. All you ing to reduce the Palestine Arabs gents that have an eye on this into a state of economic serfdom job for next year better get busy. and drive them out to the desert. I never reached my exalted posi- What we hope is that, in case of tion by loafing. Some of the boys future disturbances occurring in even show a certain unkind scep- Palestine, the American press will ticism about my having reached it be fair enough as to analyze the at all. LADY WINDERMERE'S FAN. A Review by William J. Gorman. The local unattainability of comedy" became a despairing tru- ism in Mr. Askren's dramatic criti- i cism last year. It was very true then because of the consistent avoidance of high comedy by most of the student organizations and the horrible wrenching Mimes gave Noel Coward. It is still essentially true. Miss Anglin's direction of Lady Windermere's Fan, then, becomes important not only as per sobut as a fine textbook. Throughout it is marked by a sensitive intelligence that knows how to make itself ef- fective theatrically. She knows how to keep the production flirting with realism so as to give it solidity and yet make a pleasantly artificial atmosphere predominate. This achievement of the fete galante atmosphere is particularly remark- able insLady Windermere's Fan, filled as it is with borrowed con- lescensions to the 1890 taste in plots and emotions. Miss Anglin in direction keeps these Sardou and I Dumas elements minor and con- centrates on the Aubrey Beards- ley. All this ingenuity and epigram- matic coruscation of Wilde's might very well become stationary. Miss Anglin keeps it in motion by work- ing subtly in contrasts of all sort: contrasts of tempo, contrasts of' style in the actors, contrasts of emotional reactions: all with the aim of producing that fine beam of the mental interior toward which high comedy is written. Up to the third act, all the emo- tions of the people in the play ex- cept Lady Windermere, are finely exaggerated to suggest that there aren't any emotions but merely the desire for them. Then when the group of men in the third act who have been talking and talking dis- cover that the fan they have joked about is Lady Windermere's, they merely step back quietly and de- liberately with "Irish" restraint. i This is a good example of the rhythm of pleasing significances Miss Anglin gets by varying the styles of the actors. The whole scene of conversation between the men in that act is made delightful rather than dull, as it very well might be, by the contrasts in their tempos of de- livery: Cecil Graham's absurdly l smooth speed, Lord Augustus' pleas- antly senile bursts of indignation and relapses into drawling, Mr. Dumby's slow drunken drollery. Miss Anglin's direction and most of the acting has Style: so that sincere representation and genu- ineness and that sort of thing can be safely ignored for the more cor- rect notive of finely artificial levit- ation. This is done throughout and the result is very good comedy. Just as last week, the outstand- ing performances came from Miss Anglin and Ainstworth Arnold. She has a nice interpretation of Mrs. Erlynne; that is, a nice feeling for the character with a mature, gen- uine flexibility df emotion that Wilde was continually suggesting and now and then realizing Mise ,tltllll tI t11111l tlt ll llll tltf ll ll .k RENT A RADIO CROSLEY-AMRAD SHOP 615 E. William Dial 22812 OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Lenses and Frames Made to Order Optical Prescriptions Filled HALLE R'S STATE STREET JEWELERS HOME FURNISHINGS of nationally known quality and reputation, such as SIMMONS BEDS G. E. REFRIGERATORS SANFORD RUGS STANGER FURNITURE CO. 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BROOKS-NEWTON, Inc. V, , II Ililili 1111111 1111111 liii III III 1 WANT ADS PAY! I I i' Phone 22571 Evening 22927 OMNI of 11 11 41r . -11 L -'Iw Lm li. D= RTT [1IIIt15 TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1930 Night Editor: CARL S. FORSYTHE. THE PRICE OF VOTES. With Senator Nye's investigation committee about to commence their task of determining whether or not the senatorial candidates spent too much money in getting nominated this spring, it will be of interest to all American voters to see whether they decide that money will get men elected, or whether the Senate will limit the amount that may' be spent in getting nominated and elected. Back in 1924, if we remember correctly, Senator Newberry, of our own state, chose to resign from the senate following the discovery that his fellow members thought $198,- 000 was too much money to spend in getting the Republican nomin- ation. Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCor- mick spent $250,000 in the Illinois primary as against about one- tenth of that sum spent by her un- successful opponent, and there have been no indignant senatorial outbursts so far. When William Vare got the Pennsylvania nomin- ation at a cost of $800,000. they did object to the extent of excluding him from the chamber. Joe Grun- dy, who was appointed to his place by Governor Fisher, promptly pro- ceeded to spend $332,000 in an ef- fort to succeed himself, and failed. Why is it that the cost of elections are so high today? Mr. Vare tried to justify his ex- penditures by the plea that the! other candidates were spending plenty of money in certain districts, and that he was forced to do thel same. Mrs. McCormick argued that since her opponent was the present senator, he had the assistance of patronage on his side. And Joe Grundy claimed that with his op-, ponent backed by a machine or- ganization, which would get votes regardless of the qualifications of the candidate, he had to spend plans of these Jewish organizations and show their influence in the de- velopment of those disturbances. Arab Students Union, Hann Khalaf, Pres. 0- A WARNING TO MONARCHISTS. To the Editor: . .i i tl - > ; ,_ , l . . ,# ; . I I take this unparalleled op- portunity to announce a sweeping victory for the He Men's Club in their "Coatless Shirt Campaign." Even nature herself, the all-seeing mother of us all, smiles benignly down r , c ,; He was "born in this country of upon their efforts, and cor hard-working, self-made people, verts the most stubborn an who struggled to put him thru unbelieving malcontents to th college. . . . He became dissatisfied ,glorious movement of emanc with his lot. . . . The peace and pation of the down-trodde contentment (and ignorance?) of male sex from the insidiou his childhood days were gone. . . .wiles of the feminists. Let's a Finally he woke up to the folly of i support it now in its hour o the whole process," and became a triumph, for after all, we an liberal monarchist - with whom all in the same bote . .. bao'. as monarch? (Ssh-himself?-or bott . . . aw shucks . . . vesse perhaps, well, if monarchs are , hard to get, how about me?) ! I thought the argument about AMONGST THE WANT ADS. the main purpose of life-work or WANTED-A neat and mod pleasure - had been settled long ; apartment for three days, June ago when someone decided that 22, and 23. Must be private. the oriental philosophy was best. Hmmm. adapted to those people who hadI n- id he i- en us 11 of re el. Sale of Sprn Shoes. A few outstanding bargains Church's British $13.50, Now $8.95 Johnston Murphy $14.00, Now $8.95 Our Own Big Ten $10, Now $6.95 All styles reduced including sport shoes C :! . fern m WAW v4 V Vi .. V p Y 1V 1W fCL o1 w nn1 i g. c no resourses. They might as well Anglin manages the sudden shifts say to themselves that their life is ROLLS' POETRY CORONER. from intense interest in the Lord the best. But for those nations with ' Iand Lady Windermere situation to enormous resourses, for those peo- I am deeply grieved to announce tinkling mockery of her slave Lord ple who have the possibility of a! that the Poetry Coroner has at last Augustus very effectively: that is, choice the orienetal resignation to ' succumbed to appoplexy brought wittily enough to be very amusing necessity was merely kept around on and caused by the sort of stuff yet subtly enough to make the wit in theory. It doesn't make bad that he has been getting from the seem to be important revelation of conversation. And it really sounds campus poets of late. Below is a , character. interesting when not discussed too ; fair specimen which ought to con- Then, too, Miss Anglin still has seriously. If one who signs him- vne anyone that he is happier that communicable energy of joy self "A Liberal Monarchist" is ser- and better in his present resting in the task which marks the great ious, let him recall the times in place than in this vale of tears. comedienne. There are sugges- history when the masses became ; Here is the heavy blunt instrument tions of a triumph in the very no- unwilling to produce for the ex- which was used by the murderer. tion of the part she's playing, and clusive enjoyment of the leisure There was a young man from the way she's playing it, emanat- classes. On several occasions the AAnn Arbor ing from her. A great actress does masses have withdrawn their sup- Whose thoughts were too nasty this: .that is, plays her part and port. And the crust caved in, caus- to harbor communicates herself simultane- ing many fatalities among those He used to bite babies i ously. of the upper crust. In hopes they'd get rabies Mr. Arnold's achievement seems Therefore, do not ignore the After eating at old Betsy Bar- simple: he merely exploits the wit power of the masses merely be- bour. in his technique very notably and cause a perfect democracy has not; adds verve to every scene he is in. been brought into existence. Let One Lung. It seems simple. ulac ofpgrfwctyn.caleays.fthe If I ever ask anyone to finish a Miss Loomis had the difficult ck ofperfection. Some day there limerick again, I . . no I won't task of making the play what the may be the complete achievementIither.author's temperament hardly al- I of the many ideals of the masses. ! lowed it to be-a melodrama. I ! Those ideals are vague, but never- . don't t se--a vermu.eI theless, they are sensed by most THOUGHTS WHILE ATTENDING d f Hr ls as hver, ws- of the herd. Reactionaries and CLASS. ful. Her last act, however, was I very charming. m ilI I11111111111 , 1 11 i loII f M I li .rr.,gw.r~.. .rYr.Oa.+ j 1A