PAGE FOUR. THE MICHIGAN DAILY- T UESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 193 ' FAGE FOU1~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY~ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1931 Published every morning except Monday during the University 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. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Mdicigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- anter General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.5o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY F1Arx E. COOPER, City Editor News Editor ...............Gurney Williams Editorial Director...........Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor .............JToseph A. Russell Women's Editor.......... Mary L. Behymer Music, Drama, Books.......Wi. . Gorman Assistant City Editor.......Harold 0. Warren Assistant News Editor......Charles R. Sprowl Telegraph Editor ..........GeorgeA. Stautet Copy Editor..................Wm.F. rype, NIGHT EDITORS material, for in the Press building can be found men -and women whose afternoons and evenings are literally tied down on business and editorial enterprises. The three major publications vary as to type of work, length of hours, and dis- tribution of prestige, but within the triad an enterprising under- classman can find just what he or she is looking for in a journalistic field. There is, however, a word of cau- tion which should be taken to heart by every freshman trying out for a Michigan publication. Work at the Press building takes time and effort. One cannot do publications work-thoroughly-and engage in any other major activity than scholastic. It has been tried again and again, but has never worked. Occasionally, a brilliant student can engage in two other extra-curricu- lar activities and remain on his proper level scholastically, but one of these cannot beca publication. With such a caution, however, the reward is proportionately great- er for the successful publications man. No'field is so highly esteemed and so bitterly contested as that which lies within the walls of the Press building. No activity is so in- triguing, offers such thorough, training, brings with it such a gal- axy of laurels to the winner. a field of unlimited opportunity to him who is willing to work and- try. S. Beach Conger arl S. Forsythe avid M. Nichol John D. Reindel Charles R. Sprowl Richard L. Tobin Harold O. Warren SPORTS ASSISTANTS Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy Robert Townsend REPORTERS . E. Bush Thomas M. Cooley Morton Frank Saul Friedberg Frank B. Gilbreth Jack Goldsmith Roland Goodman Morton Helper Saxtes Inglis ames J hson ryan Jones Denton C. Kunze Powers Moulton Wilbur]. Meyers Brainard W. Nies Robert L. Pierce Richard Racine Jerry E. Rosenthal Charles A. Sanford Karl Seiffert George A. Stauter Tohn W. Thomas j onn S. Townsend Eileen Blunt Nanette Dembiti Elsie Feldman Ruth Gallmeyer Emily G. Grimes Jan Lev Susan anceer Mary McCall Cile Miller Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Claire Trussell BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 T. HOLLISTER MABLEY, Business Manager KAsrz Rf. HALVERSON, Assistant Manager DEPARTMENT MANAGERS Advertising ..............Charles T. Kline Advertising ............. Thomas M. Davis Advertising.............William W. Warboys Service ..........Norris J.Johnson Publication.............Robert W. Will ianson Circulation............. Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts............. homas S. Muir Business Secretary............Mary J. Kenan Assistants Htarry R Begley Vernon Bishop William Brown Robert Callahan William W. Davis Richard H. Hiller Miles Hoisington Ann W. Verner Marian Atran Helen Bailey Josephine Convssei Maxine Fishgrund Dorothy LeMire Dorothy Laylin Erle Kignriinger Don W. Lyon -William Morgan Richard Stratemeier Keith TyTer Noel D. Turner Byron C. Vedder Sylvia Miller Helen Olsen Mildred Postal Marjorie Rough Mary E. Watts Johanna Wiese TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1931 Night Editor, CHARLES R. SPROWL GRADES AND INSTRUCTORS President Walter Dill Scott of Northwestern university has been making an investigation during the last month of grades given by members of the faculty, and has found that, in the main, it is the weakest instructors who give the lowest grades and eliminate the largest number of students. President Scott has pointed out that the poorest instructors do less. to awaken the intellectual inter- est of the students, but they give more low grades than do the best instructors. Faculty men whose grades were investigated were those who have been recommended for increases in salaries (best instruc-1 tors), and those who will not be re- employed (poor instructors). The investigation further revealed that the group of poorest instructors gave seven times as many low grades last semester as the group of best instructors. It appears from this investiga- tion that the least efficient faculty members at Northwestern, and probably in most educational in- stitutions in the country, place more emphasis on grade books than on development of intellectual in- terests. Michigan is not exempt from in- structors, even professors, who con- tinually hold the whip over the students threatening E's and D's, while altogether too little time andE energy is given to teaching. EXTRA-CURRICULAR VALUE Tomorrow afternoon, Michigan's newest freshman class will get its first chance to display extra-curri- cular talents on publications. Other fields of non-scholastic activity have been opened to the class of 1934 - athletics, dramatics, and politics-but this is the first chance which has been available to year-' lings inclined toward journalistic fields. To say that publications at Mich- igan are "extra-curicular" is but a1 small portion of the story. No fresh-1 man should try out for any publi- cation with the idea of using his work as a mere recreation, a side-F Campus Opinion Contributors ae asked to be brief, confining themsehes to less that. 300 words if possible. Anonymous com- miunications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidntial, upon re quest. Letters published shouldnot be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. February 21, 1931. Editor of the Daily: On March 4 the present session of Congress will have come to a close, in all prob- ability without having acted upon a matter which to forward-looking people exceeds in importance the matters on which the Senate has been expending its time. I refer to the ratification of the protocols necessary to effect the entrance of the United States into the World Court. There is a legimate question in the United States as to the advisa- bility of joining the League of Na- tions, but the arguments which ap- ply to such a political organization as the League, do not apply to a permanent court of justice acting among nations. The League is pri- marily concerned with Europe; the World Court, although connected with the League through its organ- ization, is in no sense dependent upon it, and in its adjudication entirely free from the motives which may actuate the Council in its settlements of disputes. The primary task of our world is to remove the causes of war. Only when that is done, can construc- tive work for a world community come to a culmination. The World Court, or rather, the conception of the way in which disputes ought to be settled for which the Court stands, is an inevitable necessary in a warless world. Even a mom- ents reflection will show the ana- logy between a world court, and the municipal courts which are such necessary adjustants to an or- derly state. Because of its conception of the peculiar position of the United States, the Senate refused to ratify the original World Court protocols unless five reservations, designed to protect the interests of the United States, were agreed to by the other members of the Court. The only reservation which caused any diffi- culty was the last half of the fifth one, which has now been met in what is called the Root Protocol. With all of its conditions met, the Senate can effect the entrance of the United States into the Court with no fear of prejudice to her in- terests. The supporters of the Court believe that there is the nec- essary majority for ratification. The only impediment to action is that the matter has been consistently tabled.- In 1932 another disarmament conference will be held, and if at that time the United States is not a member of the Court, her position will be decidedly awkward. The next regular session of Congress is too near a presidential election to allow an unbiased vote, and if the World Court issue comes up then, it will perforce become a political issue, and that is the most unfor- tunate thing which could happen to it. The time remaining for the pres- ent session is far too short for ac- THiS IS RELIGIOUS EMPHASIS WEEK'. I just felt that it might be in order to mention this fact, especial- ly as the week seems to have come at a highly ap- propriate time. To anyone walking Sdown State street last week it was ainfully appar- ' :ent that it was t i me something ilike that was put into effect, what ;w i t h padlocked fraternity houses, i :w i d e - bottomed -, ipants, and s i1k BAXTER stockings c o n- fronting the eye at every turn and even in the middle of the block- not to mention the flagrant adver- tisements of a Passion Play of all things right out in plain sight in all the windows. Heavens! EDUCATION COMMITTEE TO hEAR PRESIDENT SINK The Michigan Daily. I've always wanted to hear somebody emit one of those fine noises I am always reading about in Sunday papers (thati is, every Sunday I do.). I suppose that the fact that it is a president emitting the sound will make it something rather spe- cial to which only the ears of edu- cational committees are fit to lis- ten. My personal opinion remains! unchanged, however, I still con- sider, being a good democrat at heart, that a president GLUB or GOOLP is no better than anyone else's, no matter what the Educational Committee may think-the big snobs. r * * DAILY POEM Newberry hall, boys-gaze upon it What a subject for a sonnet! Someday in a heap 'twill fall It's a fine world after all! I heard something that delight- ed my perverted soul beyond mea- sure the other day. It may be that some of you remember the nice innocent cover that graced the Gar- goyle month before last. "Hmff" I seem to hear you say, "that's a long time ago." True it is, but it takes professors a long time to think, and you'll see the connection in a mo- ment-of if you don't, I'm wasting an awful lot of good time and space. Anyway, the Pherret over- heard two faculty members talking together and one of them remarked that he had discovered the dirty meaning to that Gargoyle cover with the flower on it. * * * Just to save you a lot of trouble, I might as well tell you that the Pherret was there at the time the cover was de- cided on, and he says there isn't any meaning to it at all,- which was my decision after some minutes of thought on the subject.-Great Guys, Pro- fessors. l* Baxter: Do you realize that you are tread- ing pretty hard on the toes of a lot of people who are loyal to their University and hate to see its min- or faults brough up in a scurri- lous column such as yours? Indignant. Dear Indignant: Yes I do, and if they are all like you I hope they have corns and tight shoes on when I do it,- and that goes for your whole family tree. Yours very truly, Daniel Indignant-right-back-at- you-Baxter * *' * IMAGINE THAT! Department The Associated Press reports that Wayne County has been adjudged wet in a recent liquor investigation report.-And here I have been liv- ing there for never-you-mind-how- many years and never suspected anything of the sort. Why, I per- sonally know of a gent living there who is separated from the nearest blind pig by one of the longest blocks in the city. *' * * THE AW SHUCKS I'M GOING TO QUIT FOR THE EVENING DEPARTMENT. A TUT,--a PISH,-and-yes, even the slightest suggestion of a PIF- FLE for all your protests! I'm not going to write another word, and that's that. This business of pub- lishing puns for unappreciative people is getting to be a terrible MCAND DRAMAI The Ann Arbor Art Association is this week sponsoring two interest- ing exhibits which are open free of charge to all students. One is the Elihu Vedder memorial exhibition which is being circulated by the American Federation of Arts. It includes eighty-one oil paintings carefully chosen to be representa- tive of the work of this artist in all of his major periods. The other exhibition is of the oils, water- colors and prints of Helen West Heller, a young modernist whose first large exhibition in Chicago last year created a sensation. "THE STRAIT-JACKET" The latter part of this week Comedy Club is offering probably its most exacting and ambitious production since "Granite" in Pro- fessor John L. Brumm's prize-win- ning play "The Strait-Jacket." Prof. Brumm's play concerns it- self with a professor of economics who is brought to a tragic fate on the one hand by the peculiarly in- sist~ent pressures of the academic environment and on the other by the inroads made on his identity an dspiritual self-subsistence by the protective type of affection granted him by his wife. In an interview, Prof. Brumm has granted an interesting vindication of the college scene as dramatic material (especially relevant here where the last three years of stu- dent writing in the drama have failed to utilize student life). Prof. Brumm says: "I have long been convinced that college life offers 1 a rich field for the discovery of dramatic values. Usually a college campus is thought of as a place where life is artificially arranged- where youth lives superficially, the way of life being nicely adjusted. "This conception of a college en- vironment is based on the notion that only a competitive economic order can prescribe the conditions of dramatic struggle. Fundamen- tally, however, drama is concerned with spiritual values, with internal conflict, with mental hazards. Ex- ternal elements are vital only as they reveal the internal tensions. It would appear, therefore, that college life affords the widest poss- ible range of choices in dealing with the real essence of drama. More- over, college folk are highly self- conscious and articulate. They are competent to explore the motives that condition life. The resulting drama may be less crassly physical, but it will be correspondingly more intellectual-and more authentic for that very reason. A baffled soul must be consciously baffled to be dramatically convincing." "The Strait-Jacket" was origin- ally written for the National Drama League Playwriting Contest. It won in the state and the interstate con- test and placed among the first ten to be submitted for final judging. One of the three judges gave it first award and the other two gave it second. Professional production was conditioned on a change of the tragic denouement, a change which the author refused to sanction, on the ground that he did not write the play to satisfy a sentimental taste. So Comedy Club with the assist- ance of Prof. Brumm as director is giving his play its first performance in theirmajor production this year. Taking the three prominent parts in the cast are Katherine Kratz, Mildred Todd and Stanley Donner. Performances will be given Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday evening in the Mendelssohn Theatre. DRAMA AT YALE An achievement of Yale's play production of dramatic criticism is their recent production of the "Trachiniae" of Sophocles - the first performance given anywhere since the death of Sophocles in 406 B. C. An interesting effort in the pro- duction seems to have been the attempt to approximate the condi- tions of the Hellenic theatre 2,300 years ago. The set was constructed of movable blocks on an absolutely bare stage with a blue cycloramo as background; and the entire aud- ience was seated in the balcony to gain more nearly the perspectives of the Greek amphitheatre. The costumes were very closely modelled after those in Greek statuary and vase designs. 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