THE-MTCHTGAN -DAILY' 'rIURDAY, P FTRAY 27, .1930 Published every morning except Monday inuring the Tlniversity year by the Board in Control 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. of diminishing, this need is in-1 creasing as the number of men and women attending universities con- -U TED stantly grows. It is unfortunate /M /o~, , /- that Michigan must follow rather POSITIVE than lead this trend. SGN OF o-- -G ' F Music And Drama 11 _ _i b Ali Entered at the postoffice at' Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post. taster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.0.; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- vard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF, Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY Editorial Chairman.........George C. Tilley} City Editor................. Pierce RosenbergI News Editor............Donald J. Kline SpForts Editor........ Edward' L. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor............ Marjorie Follmer Telegraph Editor.........Cassam A. Wilson Music and Drama........William J. Gorman Literary Editor..........Lawrence R. Klein Assistanrt City Editor.... Robert J. Feldman Night Editors-Editorial Board Members Frank E. Cooper henry J. Meer William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloss Charles R. Eauffmran Walter W. Wilds Gurney Williams Reporters Bertram Askwith Lester May Helen Bare David M. Nichol Maxwell Bauer William Page. Mary L. Behymer Howard Ii. Peckham. Benjamin I. Berentsonllugh Pierce Allan H. Berkman Victor Rabinowitz Arthur 3. Bernstein John D. Reindel S. Beach Conger Jeannie Roberts Thomas M. Cooley Joseph A. Russell John H. Denler Joseph Ruwitch Helen Domine William P. Salzarulo Margaret Eckels Charles R. Sprowi K~thearine Ferrin Ad sit Stewart Cjrl F. Forsythe S. Cadwell Swanso Sheldon C. Fullerton Jane rhayer Ruth Geddes Margaret Thompson Ginevra Ginn Richard L. Tobin ] ack Goldsmith Elizabeth Valentine Dorris Groverman Harold 0. Warren, Jr. Ross Gustin Charles White Margaret Harris G. Lionel Willens David B. Hemnpstead John 1E. Willoughby 3.Cullen Kennedy Nathan Wise cean Levy Barbara Wright ussellE. McCracken Vivian imit Dorothy Mageei BUSINESS STAFF3 Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER A. J. JORDAN, JR. Assistant Manager ALEX K. SCHERER Department Managers Advertising .............T. Hollister Mabley Advertising.............Kasper 1-. Halverson Advertising............Sherwood A. Upton Service..................George A. Spater Circulation.................J. Vernor Davis Accounts......... .....John R. Rose Publications ............ George R. iHamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker James E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey Robert Crawford Thomas Muir Hlarry B. Culver George R. Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford orman Eliezer Lee Slavton Janmes Hoffer Joseph Van Riper Norris' Johnson Robert Williamson Charles Kline William R. Worboy Dorothy Bloomgardner Alice McCully Laura Cadling Sylvia Miller Agates Davis . Helen E. Musselwhite Bernice Glaser Eleanor Walkinshaw Hortense Gooding Dorothea Waterman Night Editor- WALTER WILDS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1930 Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be lbit f, confining themselves to less than Soo words of possible. Anonymous (1n- munications will be disrg:arded. The names of conmunicant will. however It may be cold and rainy and sloppy and etc., but spring is sure- ly on the way. And as I live and scarcely breathe, the D. O. B. gave me the intimation of it. Yesterday --- TH1E APPLECAWCT According to the critical recep- tion given his latest play in New York this week, George Bernard is still a fine writer of rather good bad plays-which ought to be now labelled the Shavian paradox, that ~mumWj/ S &mr/V bid 1 wiled aac'k Leo this slop Ind 1-he eni flowsers & }O 6 -"A cnms rnelomas ':~i sig Icamth eali lcatd.valate be regarded as conidenti:al, upon re.- eharstycal fromttdShawmated quest .Letters pulihed ; honllot he !came the first call from the HealthShw ayblotevlaed construedtersm i e editorialt rheand dismissed in the dramatic tra- opinion of t kDaily.n Service for all those who are usually i afflicted with hay fever. They want i SUCSSFUtbegin riminary'treatmentsTuesday morning in the Times, he E on the sufferers. From which I is still "a law unto himself" and To those who have watched the gather that it won't be long that about the good writer of bad progress of the Women's League plays is pretty near the law. By it Building during the past year, it he has lived a vivacious career as is a source of great speculation as Do you save your pennies? If not a dramatist, enhanced in this you'd better 'start now because the to whether its major purpose, that Penny Carnival will soon be here. country by the Theatre Guild's not- of forming a bond of unity between That's a great institution and wor- able, though perhaps somewhat women on campus, has been ful- thy of your support. For a dime questionable, avowal to produce filled, or whether the League will you can have a good time; for two everything Shaw has written. And , oa bits you, can treat yourself to a evidently, according to the ac- in time degenerate into the "high swell blowout; and for half a dol- counts of the Applecart, he is go- class railway station" which the lar you can go on a terrific bender. ing to die by it. There was some- Union appears to be. thing rather notable, though With a modernly equipped build- 1 again perhaps questionable, about ing and a well-functioning per- R. J. F. writes in to call my at- sonnl wrse oncamus aveev-tentioni to an article which ap-I Shaw's depreciation of Shake- sonnel women on campus have ev nI speare and praise of himself. It is ery opportuity to take more active peared recently in the Detroit a good joke. strides towards developing that co- News, having to do with ping pong. operative body which will make it- "One hears rumors," runs the item, self felt in every campus situation "that at the fraternity houses in of a political or social nature and Ann Arbor there is a nightly rush - of raising themselves from the tra- for the ping pong table as soon as ditional minor position they are dinner is over." supposed to occupy. e * But is thiis building serving such One may hear rumors but one purposes? There lies the major shouldn't believe all he hears. If question. The answer is derived, there's any rushing toward ping I:: not from those in charge of the gong tables after dinner it's be- building and the organization, who cause they put the extra desserts have made all possible use of fa- on- it. cilities, but from the women them- selves and from the use they are * * * making of the building. Besides, if all the ping pong ta- People who were shown through bles in Ann Arbor were placed end last spring are wondering whether to end on campus you could walk Michigan women cook their meals by the line in less than a minute; in the Cave, meet their friends in unless, of course, you tripped over the Russian Tea Room rather than them or something. in the Parrot, and feel free to read * * the well-chosen collection of books Don't forget the Rolls Honorary in the library. If so, they are ttruly Degrees. Five contributions makes making the League a social bond you a Cub; 10 entitles you to be a which will continue to grow yuaCb 0ette o ob stron erl Reporter; and 15 brings the title UEEE.E of Assistant Editor. Don't forget, - However, vague doubts are being too, that tlhe items should concern The Applecart is dubbed a "poli- expressed that the League is being local doings. There are a lot of tical extravaganza in two acts and more utilized by townspeople and contributior.s on hand that can't an interlude." It is Shaw benig- alumni than by the students and be used because they aren't of lo- nantly trifling, in his true tradi- that the lobbies, although con- cal interest. tion of cerebral horseplay, with a stantly filled, are not swarming * * British King and a British Labor with college women who are taking Rolls is by, with, for, at, to, from Cabinet and an American Ambas- advantage of these facilities. If and on campus. sador in the 1870's. A King, the this is true, one is forced to agree *!usual projection of Shaw himself, with the skeptic that soon this ; * **full of malicious flattery and satir- building will follow the somewhat Ad in classified column: "LOST- ical logic, is presented with an ul- discouraging fate of the Union. Topcoat left in cab Sunday night. timatum by his Cabinet about his And yet it is our opinion that . . ." That's exactly right, fella. habit of sticking his tongue in the ' after one year of trial it would be Anything left in a cab is lost. imosilt ra nyscha-I political pie rather too frequently impossible to draw any such -as- *,k * to be a good King. He dramnatical- sumption. It will take time to ed- Arelius Zip wants to know if any- ly announces his intention of ab- I ucate 2,500 women to the benefits thing can be done to simplify this dicating and taking issue against of the building and show them how business of getting up in the the Cabinet as a real politician completely it is at their service. morning. He states that two sci- with a politician's tools. This thor- SAnd we feel confitdentthat the entific students with whom he rooms oughly scares the weakkneed cabi- building, despite all rumors to the have almost solved the problem, net who accept things, bad as they contrary, is being utilized, and that 1 in the following manner: Every are, that they may continue to be the League will continue to be an morning of an eight o'clock, he as good as they are. increasingly powerful means of states, the alarm is set for five But of course, this is not all that welding the women on this campus minutes after seven. When it rings the garrulous Shaw has written. into closer unity and a body that it is simply turned about 10 min- There are the usual excursions its wholly cooperative with the aims utes ahead. This is continued un- down highly amusing highways. A of the University. til four minutes of eight, at which whole interlude is written between J. R. '32. time the scientific students get up. the King and his Platonic mistress * solely .in order, Atkinson says, thatE THEME SONGS. That isn't very scientific, Arelius, the audience may be allowed the but a man has to work things out scene in which the couple roll quite The public of America for many for himself, I suppose. My method purely around the floor. Then long weeks suffered the feeble is to put the clock on the other there is the scene, already famousi squawks of the first talkies, nursed side of the room so that in order to through publicity, in which the them over their rough spots, and shut it off it is necessary for me to American Ambassador announces were finally rewarded by reason- get out of bed. I have never yet that the Declaration of Independ- ably audible tones from these mas- shut it off but the principle is o.k. ence has been repealed, and that terpieces of the cinema. First those See if you can do anything with it. America proposes to abolish the blaring Broadway song shows; then * * Atlantic Ocean and rejoin the the tense melodramas; and now By the way, Aurelius, you now British Empire. Elsewhere an (may Will Hays take pity on us) have one point toward a Cub de- American is defined as "only a a hybrid combination of the two. gree. . wop pretendihg to be a Pilgrim I. They talk and we listen, and most forefather Sof them seem to get by on our mo- DAILY DRAMA. _ rn r.Fnr~r Fn ni r n~i .. ...}. 41:.. ... .... - t Norwegian calfski'*n in black and brown Featured in our spring Big Ten oxfords at $10 W1 G1 ER COMPA11~Y or IT/en JAince ,&4g i I i 609 E.WILLIAM ST. PHONE70/4 106 E.WASH IN6TON ST.P110f.9.9 !'V- t4 _ 1 p e 1 I NEEDED: A SUPER-KINDERGARTEN. The demand for a plan such as that offered by the University col- lege has lost none of its potency as new supporters are appearing constantly. Dean Max McConn of Lehigh university, in an article ap- pearing in last Sunday's New York Times, indicates that he has taken the field on the same issue. In view of recent developments on the Michigan campus, this new de- fense of the special school for "collegiates is most pertinent." Substantially, Dean McConn has classified college students into two groups: the rah-rah boys of the coonskin coat contingent, and those who seek "culture" and some understanding of the truth, beauty, and meaning of life. The greatest number, he admits, are animated by a purpose less exalted and eso- teric, but still thoroughly admir- able--a bread and butter purpose. In behalf of the rah-rah boys Dean McConn says that they are by no means morons, but come from good families, are rather above the average in inteligence and few are dissipated or immoral to any serious extent. In short, their only weakness is that they are not intellectuals, while the col- lege job, so far as it serves the pro- fessional or cultural purpose, must remain a bookish job for "high- brows." Parents send boys to college whc are entirely unsuited to meet its ordinary, every day requirements. Yet "it's being done" and parents feel that their social standing m ight otherwise be lowered, or it might be impliedthat they could not afford college for their off- spring. As Dean McConn points out, the obvious answer is to segregate the two groups, with a real college (in its original meaning) for the in- tellectually gifted and, since the others are inevitably coming to college too, a separate institution to take care of them. "In this way thy? nrk~bt _n m rilrl ht- ohandnnpid See Wa $ 1 A 1 t _ 3 , i r a G i . i r .i s t lll t r mentary fascination with this new- ly accomplished art. After attending a few of these more recent "bigger and better" offerings of the silver screen, one can't help feeling that some affect- ed producer discovered a beautiful ditty, and maliciously, with malice aforethought, proceeded to write some scintillating scenario around it. There is nothing more painful to the audience than seeing the hero, miles away from civilization, and pursued by forty thousand demons, to suddenly stop in some secluded1 spot, and with the aid of a mightyI symphony orchestra, break forth into the strains of the theme song.j A 'he man' of the wilderness, the# hero of our dreams, softly croon- ing a sweet song about dear little Molly, far away in the big, big city; what director can honestly believe that is art?I But nothing can be done about i4- XYV.. .s.1. Ln,+^ -- L~.- .. Act. 1, scene I Man is sitting poised over typewriter - motion- less. Act 1, scene 2. Man is sitting motionless-poised over typewriter. Act 2, scene 1. Man is sitting over typewriter-poised motionless. Act 2, scene 2. (two hours later). Man is still sitting poised over mo- tionless typewriter. This is a mystery play. Who is the leading character? If you guess correctly don't tell your friends. They'll think I haven't anything to, write about. * * * Tryouts for the Women's staff are due up here in a few minutes, so don't be surprised if the column begins to get incoherent. * * * William Herbert Hobbs1 local prof., has just published a book on "The North Pole of the Winds." I, haven't read the book - it costs five bucks-but I imagine he means _O SERGE PROKOFIEFF. Serge Prokofieff, Russian pianist and composer, will present a pro- gram of his own works Sunday eve- ning, March 2, at 9 o'clock in the smaller auditorium of the Detroit Institute of Arts. This will be thei third concert on the series being sponsored by the Detroit chapter of Pro Musica. In order to give the audience an idea of his scope as a composer the program will include three of his melodies for violin and piano, a1 sextet for strings, clarinet, and pi- ano, and several soprano solos. Prokofieff's recital will be thet feature concert of the year. Past programs of importance sponsored' by the society have been given by Gabriel Leonoff, the Russian tenor, and Alexander Tansman, the Pol- ish pianist and composer. The Pro Musica society aims to present Will Do Like Two Pens for the Price of One . .and a Desk Base Included Pen GUARANTEED FOR LIFE! For only $10 you can now with Pressureless Touch! A buy this Parker streamlined pen that's guaranteed for life! Convertible Duofold Desk Pen, Streamlined barrel of non - including a handsome onyx breakable Permanite sets low- base to hold it,and a Pocket Cap er in the pocket than others be- with Clip to change it to a Pock- cause the clip starts at theTOP, et Pen on leaving for classes. not halfway down the cap. Parker Duofold, a pen that For a shorter way to better doesn't have to be forced by grades and more productive pressurebecauseitsheavygold, studying, see these handsome hand-ground, super -smooth, Parker speed writers at a near- iridium-tipped point responds by pen counter today! 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