THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1931 - -- Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control or 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 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- ma~ter General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.so. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925;Business, 2rz21. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone4921 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY FlxAN E. Coom, City Eduit News Editor ... ...........Gurney Williams Editorial Director..........Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor. ............ Joseph A. Russell Women's Editor...........MaryL. Behymer Mdusic, Drama, Books. ... Wm... W . Gorman Assistant City Editor......Harold 0. Warren SAsistant News Editor...Charles R. Sprowl elegraph Editor . . re A. Stautej Copy Editor..................'n. E. Pypes NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Carl S. Forsythe Charles R. Sprowl David M. Nichol Richard L. Tobin Harold 0. Warres Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less that. 300 words if possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants wili, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. To the Editor: .I :1 ; ;.:1 ,;, M :'f ;1 __l 1 '] 't'l ''f l :'1 ,1 !l SPOITs AssIsTANTs Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy 10 Charles A. Sanford REPORTERS Thomas M. Cooley Wilbur J. Meyers Morton Frank Brainard W. Nies Saul Friedberg Robert L. Pierce Frank B. Gilbretki Richard Racine Roland Goodman Jerry E. Rosenthal Morton Helper Karl Seiffert Bryan Jones George A. Stauter Denton C. Kunze Tohn W. Thomas Powers Moulton John S. Townsend Eileen Blunt Mary McCall Nanette Dembiti Cile Miller Elsie Feldman Margaret O'Brien Ruth Gallmeyer Eleanor Rairdon Emily G. Grimes Anne Margaret Tobin 0an ev Margaret Thompson roty vMagee Claire Trussell One of the perpetual storm cen- ters of faculty and student contro- versy is again nearing a low pres-i sure period. Ever since the system of marking by letters was intro- duced at Michigan, about 30 years ago, there has been agitation for a return to grades of "passing," "failing," and perhaps one of "passed with honor." At present a faculty committee of the literary college, headed by Dean Humph- reys, is considering the question. The student body, although vitally affected by the whole matter, has not responded to the extent that it should. This no doubt has been caused by a lack of appreciation of the issues involved. The question, it seems to us, goes deeper than the mechanics of grades. It involves all of the ideals of liberal education. We are being asked whether we prefer achieve- ment to be measured by'ability to memorize and mouth, or by the degree of true cultural attainment and height of reasoning shown. As long as the deadly A to E arrange- ment persists, just so long will the University remain an education factory. The loafers, here for con- ventional or social reasons, will continue to squeeze through on C minuses, and the uninspired book- slaves will drag down their A's Meanwhile the person. with some ideals of culture and intelligent learning will feel stifled. Instead of all this, the faculty, it backed by strong student opinion can have the power to introduce e sincere policy. If the simple ar- rangement mentioned in the firsi paragraph is adopted, standard. can be raised to eliminate the per- sons on the edge. There need bE less fear of failure to memorize al lessons perfectly. There can be th opportunity to do some sincere scholarly, and more than superfi cial studying. There will 'of cours' always be the problem of the per son who barely get by, but hi standards will have to be highel And the really superior student, a one faculty member has pointer out, will finally receive adequat recognition. R. G., '32. LTODAY IS SNOT APRIL FIRST but yesterday was, as anyone could easily see by glancing at the advertisement that Gargoyle ran.1 One side of it said GNIRPS -. -. just like that. Of course, I think that nothing is nicer than a little April Fool joke every now and then (preferably every April Fool's Day) but I do think that that sort of thing is carrying it a bit too far. ?F * * One of our well known Hum- or magazines has discovered that it can print what chorus girls think of college men and get a lot of very fine advertis- ing done. Through the kind of-' fices of ELMER we have discov- ered that we cannot print what college men think of chorus girls . . . which is just another disadvantage of being mid-vic- torian (one who rides around in the center of one of those silly old carriages). The B & G Boys have another laurel to add to their trophy list. Surely you know what laurels are? Well, I can't explain it very well but they seem to have something to do with steam-shovels . . . you know they call that building over across from the Union the 'Laurel Club.' Anyway, in the quadrangle where all those four-eyed people do their wrangling the boys planted a lovely row of Ash Trees . . . at least I guess they were ash trees because when they were hauling them over there they were always ashing each other what they were . . . and they got one of them three inches ou of line which necessitated digging the whole thing up again along with a few yards of lovely sidewalk tj k Queen in Barrymore's "Hme, .D ' for her Ibsen revivals, and for her 3I4 South State St. recent appearance in "Lysistrata") in the title role of a production of Sophocles' "Electra," the choreo- graphy of which will be directed by WATI Martha Graham of the Dance Re-'LERC 'pertory Theatre. The second week of the festival, Miss Yurka will be HAY the star in a play as yet unan- nounced which will receive its Mem American premier here in Ann Ar- New York St bor. The third week will see Tom Detroit Stoc Powers (late virtuoso of "The Ap- New York Cur ple-cart" in the Theatre Guild pro- duction) and Violet Kemble-Cooper Deale (of the "Lysistrata" cast) as co- stars in the first production outside Invest New York of Noel Coward's "PRI- Secui VATE LIVES," which is being so , brilliantly received now with Cow- Account ard and Gertrude Lawrence in the for C leading roles. The last two weeks of the season, these two will ap- Mezzani pear in some plays, the possibili- FIRST N4 ties being considered Silvara's "Ca- BANK o price" and Shaw's "The Great Phones: 2 a, Catherine." Mr. Henderson, who is complet- e ing the plans for this group of pro- r ductions is at present playing at z the Copley Theatre, Boston; and has been recently engaged as as- t sociate director, to succeed Alexan-w Sder Kirkland, of the summer sea- 9 son at the Berkshire Playhouse, . Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Defin- C a: itive plans for the Ann Arbor Fes- Odi ' wi ti 1%-nivuiuu- ii-uii -- . RILL Phone 6615 LING iEN& "ES bers ock Exchange k Exchange Ab (Associate) ers in tment rities : Carried lients MU SIC AND DRAMA PROFESSIONAL DRAMA IN MAY Word comes from Robert Hender- son, director of last year"s Drama- tic Festival, that negotiations are being made for its repetition this year. The first week will mark, it is thought, the appearance of Blanche Yurka (well-known as the FOR CK ETS £ RESERVA1I\ EE TRAVEL BUREAU ~Ak Oti NT TEAM M. CUIM,1TOURS/ 6~01 E. N3* A RBR ~ tR $0IN URANCE AG NCt A N D M PENCILS All makes and all prices A Red Arrow Place Oi i ne Floor ATIONAL BLDG. 3221-23222 P" L SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SusanMManchester BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 212~4 T. HOLLSTER MAnLEY, Business 3fuagver KAsIa 1$. HALVERSON, Assistant Msa aer DEPARTMENT MANAGERS Advertising ... ........... Charles T. Kline Advertising..............Thomas M. Davis Advertising ............William W. Warboys Service .. ..............Norris 3.Johnson Publication ............Robert W. Williamson Circulation..............Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts-----------Thomas S. Muir Business Secretary............Mary J. Kenan Assistants MOX0 ,. - . . _ ._ .._ ___ __________________________________ I Y Your Feet si Harry R. Begley Vernon Bishop William Brown Robert Callahan William W. Davis Richard H. Hiller' Miles Hoisington Ann W. Verner Marian Atran Helen Bailey Josephine Convissd Maxine Fishgrund Dorothy LeMire Dorothy Laylin Erle Kightlinger Don W. Lyon William Morgan Richard Stratemeiest Keith TTrer Noel D. Turner Byron C. Vedder Sylvia Mille Hielen Oisen Mildred Postal Marjorie Rougli Mary E. Watts Johanna Wiese THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1931 Night Editor - HAROLD WARREN "COURSES, NOT CLASSES" Yale's new plan of study, thor- oughly publicized in its merits, is' beginning to wear through in em- barrassing places. The latest loop- hole to be found is the selection of two-hour courses and their assimi- lation into the new plan. Too val- uable to be dropped, and naturally of -insufficient material to fill out To the Editor: In view of certain recent happen- ings it seems no more than just, that the good people of Ann Arbor be approached for an explanation. During the past week the heads of fraternity and sorority houses, receivedcertain telephone calls. Upon answering the phone they: were confronted with this proposi- tion. the maximum six hours which the A voice informed the house presi- new plan calls for, the problem is dent that the unemployment situa- an acute one indeed. The Yale tion in Ann Arbor had become more News wants to know why "they serious than had been anticipated. shouldn't be given regular, full The voice then went on to say that credit" for in every way "it is the the City, in its chivalrous efforts to courses that count, not the classes." ameliorate the condition of its un- --employed, was calling upon the For the past ten years the truth of this statement has been more Green letter groups for help, and and more evident to the middle- would the president of the house western collegian. No matter how please see that his house was rep- many tinmegan.eek atclass hayresented at a meeting at the Union many times a week a class maythtenig meet, it is doubtful if all three hour that evening? courses are worth more than a If the above stated idea was the great number of two hour elections, beit well- some half-baked, al- and it is still more doubtful if the ite meaning) student, the credit given is equally earned writer has no quarrel. But if some city official, or any throughout the two groups. At other Ann Arbor townsman in any Harvard and Yale a professor gives way representative of civic senti- as many lectures a week as he feels ment, has had the gall to make necessary to cover the ground in such a plea to the students of the his course, regardless of its 'pre- University he should be informed scribed hours of credit. Thus, if a right speedily how matters stand. pithy subject requires three full Surely a city cannot call down hours of lecture for its completion nation-wide infamy upon a group Which reminds us strangely of the way they sodded the whole plot in there last Spring so that they could drive nice trucks over it all Summer and Fall. DAILY POEM See it snow! It must ue spring- time.- Flowers in the crannied wall! Mud in everybody's shoetops . It's a fine world after all! Speaking of which causes me tci remark that one swallow couldn't make a Summer out of this if he had three months to work in and an option on the equator. ECONOMICS ..d. CORRUPTIN IAgain we arc indebted to ELMER for the following. He was discuss- ing the Laundry Bill question with a young lady who works on one of 'Michigan's leading annuals (The 'Ensian, in case you couldn't guess) and happened to remark that he got six dollars credit a year on his bills for some work he was doing. "Six dollars!" the young lady was heard to exclaim, "Why I could pay for my laundry for a whole year out of that!" . . . And she probably could.. Which brings us right around to the question of what the D.O. B. is coming to these days. The faculty is getting so wild for easy publicity that the Daily Bulletin now takes up the greater part of two pages in- stead of the former half page that they used in the good old days. I never read the silly drivel anyway. It is so full of tasty items about or- gan recitals, events for the coming semester, and announcements from Gertie the scrub woman in the Ed- ucation School to whom it may con- cern about when the students much ado about nothing league is to meet that I never can find anything I want to know anyway. It is much easier to call up someone and find out. , OLD BLACK JOE DEPT. TIHE GARGOYLE, Campus Smut Organ is out today. Buy one and astonish your friends ... they never would have thought it of you. There is Just One thing about This Modern free Verse and that is that It does take up a lot of space If You Handle it right And Make the most of your Opportunities. WOULD *OUT K ,TOTAKE A Liv'ai win oe annauncect -nortiy. 1111 HENRY COWELL Henry Cowell who lectures to- morrow afternoon at 4:15 in the Mendelssohn Theatre is one of the l most brilliant of the younger com- posers, as the awarding to him of the Guggenheim scholarship a few days ago clearly indicates. Besides composition, however, he has iden- tified himself in several important capacities (as author of a book "New Musical Resources" and edi- tor of the magazine "New Music") with the effort to spread a more intelligent attitude toward the aims and achievements of the more mod- ern composers. His lecture Friday will be primarily on this topic and will be illustrated by him at the piano. DANCE RECITAL PROGRAM Ronny Johanssen, the Swedish dancer, who is to appear in the Mendelssohn Theatre S a t u r d a y night in the third of the dance re- citals sponsored by the League has announced the following program. Miss Johanssen will be assisted by Pauline Pettibone at the piano. Menuet ................ Paderewski a Allegro energico .......Palmgren b Song .................... Bartok Piano Solo; Scherzo . .Mendelssohn W altz ..................... Strauss All Marcia .......... Rachmaninow Piano Solo Witches.......Wilckens Polka .................. Glazounow INTERMISSION Javanese Impressions ............. ..............Original Melodies' .arr. by Seelig. Piano Solo Legend..-......Albeniz La Danse-.................Debussy Piano Soli Hurdy Gurdy) . .Goosens Music Box) a Impromptu ............... Grieg b Scherzo-...................Gade Rustic Dance-................Grieg FESTIVAL PROGRAMS Two Festival programs have been announced, those including the two outstanding stars of the Festival, Lily Pons, sensationally y o u n g French soprano who has made an exciting debut at the Metropolitan this season, and Ignace Jan Pa- derewski, whose final American tour was extended to include his' appearance here in May. Miss Pons will appear three times f on the program, singing, Mozart's aria "Oui, tu vois en moi une rivale" from "The Magic Flute," "Caro Nome" from Verdi's "Rigoletto," and the intricate aria The Bell Song from Delibes' "Lakme," which she has recently recorded very bril- liantly. The orchestra will fill out this Wednesday concert with Dvor- ak's overture "Husitzka," Chaus- son's Symphony in B fiat major, Borodin's "A Sketch of the Steppes of Central Asia," and Johann The Polka style notes forations t you unusu. and health. --smart! Note the leather combination POLKA TIE Delightful combination of Sea Sand Calfskin with Spanish Brown Calf. nBreathe! Tie combines two outstanding -the split decoration and per- through the lining. This gives al style, plus coolness, comfort $10.00 BUTR4N'S WALK-OVER SHOP 115 S. MAIN ST. ANN ARBOR r; r I r7- UNIVERSITY OF MIC FIGAN ORATORICAL ASSOCIAT'N Presents -1C hdw ---'- .0' 0= / -- A Hero of World Distinction In "My Buccaneering Cruise" withnm a semester, three lectures are given each week. If, however, a two hour election can be covered with one lecture a week, or a three hour with one lecture and one quiz every other week, the professor in charge calls classes at those times and no oftener. The Yale plan is all well and good for the general educational trend, the comprehensive study of a field, but a question arises as to whether or not these short, one and two hour courses, put in because of their individual importance, can ever be displaced by the wider scope. In our opinion there is noth- ing more important than the ex- hilaration of a pleasing, self-satis- fying course, whether one hour or five, a course which carries one, along at a rapid rate in a special field of interest to a few students. The necessity of such courses is too of young people, and incidentally seriously inconvenience a number of this group, and then in return expect these same young people to open up their hearts to a cause which is, in the final analysis, not theirs. The , City hadn't enough to do without meddling in student af- fairs a short time back; and a beautiful mess resulted. Now that the City finds itself with more on its officious hands than it can well handle, the students' help is en- listed! The student body has ever shown itself ready and willing to support any worthy project. The Fresh Air Camp is a witness to this. But in this instance the City may possibly find that student affairs are suffi- cient to keep the students occupied with their own business, a practice which certain police commissioners in flea O~-iu of Ann Arhnr wniid The GER AN SEA DEVIL onight April 2nd Hill Auditorium-8:00 Series ticket holders will be admitted on the same ticket used for the ___.- _ - .R... I