THE MICHIGAN DAILY morning except Monday dur- year by the Board in Control ationa. tern Conference Editorial Asso- Press is exclusively entitled to lication of all news dispatches not otherwise credited in this al news published herein. postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michi- lass matter. Special rate of by Third Assistant Postmaster carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. rbor Press Building, Maynard ditorial, 4925; Business, 21214. TORIAL STAFF elephone 4925 NAGING EDITOR nan Editorial Board ENRY MERRY . COOPER, City Editor ............Gurney Williams .. Walter W. Wilds litor........Harold 0. Warren .Joseph A. Russell ...M........ary L. Behnyer ooks.........Win. J. Gorman s .....Bertram J. Askwith ditor.......Charles I. Sprowi .. ...George A. Stauter ............WI. EL. ryper 'IGHT EDITORS Charles n. Sprowl Richard L. Tobin Harold 0. Warren hours must be taken in any one field. The University Senate and the faculty of the Literary college dle- serve credit for the steps they have taken in this manner. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less thai. 300 words if possible. At'nymous com- 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 opinion of The Daily. A DOCTOR OR A SALESMAN DROLLS HURRY! HURRY! In this hour of its greatest need your University calls upon you to respond as you never have before. Forget the triv- ialities of life. Let the manhood and womanhood of each and every Michigander (this applies to the Michigeese, too) come to the fore and squelch once and for all this plague that is among us. You have only two more days to IGNORE THE MAY PESTILENCE! TRFSIC AND DR T THIRD FESTIVAL CONCERT: The i- i I I DRIVEWAY PEBBLES I FRATERNITY JEWELRY PARTY FP !. - . ARCADE JEWELRY SHOP CARL F. BAY To the Editor: Sports Assistants 0. Fullertonr A JCullen Kennedy Charle A. Sanford REPORTEPS U: Cooley Robert L. Pierce 'rank Richard Raine ,Glbreth Karl Seiffert dberg Jerry L, Rosenthal oo dnan Ceorge A.Stauter Relper JohnV. Thomas ts John S. Townsend . Meyer.s but Mary Mcall lerbilt 'MCueMiller ddman Margaret O'Brien Ilmyer >Eleaobr Rairdon *Grimes Anne Margaret Tobin yjr Margaret Thompson Mgees Claire Trussell BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 GLSTER MABLEY, Business Manager R H. HALvERSON, Assistant Manager Department Managers ing--------------Charles T. Kline i...Thomas M. Davis in...... ...Wlliam W. War~oys ....Norris J. Johnson ion ...........Robert W. Williamson ton.........Marvin S. Kobacker .. ..Thomas S. Muir Secretary . ......Mary J. Kenan Assistants Beglev AssNoel . Turner, 3ishop Don. W. Lyon rown William Morgn uallaan Richard strateineer iW.Davis Keith Tyler ' oi'ngton Richard H.Hiller htlinger Byron C. vedder Verner Sylvia Miller Arran Helen Olsen aIey Mildred Postal s onvss er " arjorie Rough rcilmgunid .MaryB. W atts LeMire Johanna Wiese Laylin FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1931 Editor -JOHN D. REINDEL DEMIC REORGANIZATION owing closely on the accom- d business reorganization of riversity by President Ruth- :omes the announcement of roposed reorganization of the rsity Senate and the new gan plan, both of which will, near future go to the Board gents for their approval. se two steps are continuing uthven policy of reorganiza- n the University, discarding umbersome methods for new as the growing needs of the rsity demand it. This time, cedemic methods have been ached, and with success. University Senate was, among things, to "originate and con- measures - for the mainten- >f the liberal and comprehen- )olicy of education; for the aum utilization of the intel- 1 resources of the University." s end, a body of 531 men was shed. The academic mind is to function slowly, and no r how brilliant the members, p of this size must have con- ble difficulties in obtaining s. The new plan, which pro- to transfer the powers of the e to the new University coun- uld establish a group of 57, e basis of ex-officio members epresentative members. This vidently is much less unwiel- d bulky than the former one, xcessive argumentation and of time can be eliminated. Michigan plan, which pro- two two-year courses, ap- ies in its fundamental ideas 'niversity _college plan which > vigorously advocated by the r President Little. This ex- ent extends only to the Liter- ollege, but with much to mend it. By this new division, >ped to innoculate the student :ome sort of intellectual cur- a process which cnnot very ie imposed upon him unwill- ts long as the only curriculum tions placed upon him con- the group requirements, and ves college at times with a ring of economics, political e, English, languages and Ither subjects in his head, but At the Presbyterian Church last Sunday evening, Dr. Harrison spoke to a group of young people on the subject of missionary methods in Arabia. In one of his main statements he said that he could tell us in fifteen minutes all that a student would learn in three years in ar seminary about missionary methods.1 Half sleepy and still doubting just whether I am going to hear a fairyy tale or a true story, I rubbed myc eyes, shook my head and listened1 with mouth wide open and ears as1 attentive as that of a child hearing a curious story from an old lady., Before long, however, I was definite that the speaker had been greatly, influenced by the stories of the Arabian nights and that he was ingeniously concocting an addition- al story to "Adventures in Wonder- land" with himself as a hero. -To confirm his pre-mentioned assertion he started to narrate to us the events of a single trip across the desolate desert of Arabia. Out of twenty years of experience in Arabia, the speaker chose to cite to the group this unique story of the primitive Bedouin Arabians of the southern part of the central desert. Without sparing any factor by which he could depict with exaggeration the miseries of living which he shared with those isolated Arabians, he proceeded to show how he has to drink stinking water, to eat bread spiced with hair, and mouse boiled without butchering or cleaning. By this and similar cita- tions, Dr. Harrison intended to tell us in fifteen minutes what the gen- eral life of the Arabian is, and how the typical missionary must adapt himself to it. Of course he was clever to paint a picture so ridiculously that he was able to entertain his audience at the ex- I pense of other people. The main objections to such an action are these: It is unfair to give I a one-sided picture. It is less fair to cite an exceptional experience, or the way of living of the most primitive region in Arabia and to attribute that to the general coun- try. Besides it is hardly defensible to tell an American audience par- ticular, and probably incidental missionary experience which a per- son wanted to apply to general mis- sionary life. As a matter of fact, an average missionary does not have to suffer as any one who has heard Dr. Harrison would naturally infer. It is true, however, that the aver- age missionary in the Arabian States maintains a standard of living not lower than that of an average American, and higher than the standard of the average Ara- bian of the developed regions. There is no objection, though, on my part to this fact. My purpose is merely to disclose the actual existing con- ditions and to clear up wrong im- plications, because I have myself seen missionaries in my home town and learned about others in the other towns who have good homes furnished with modern furniture, and supplied with electricity, tele- phones, clean water from the city water system, who also have other facilities and conveniences such as gardens, tennis courts and others which fall in the category of lux- uries.- In conclusion, if the strange and exciting stories are used as a meas- ure for raising funds, then I believe the doctor has proved to be a tact- ful salesman. Arab Student. It is revealed now that Reno's mayor, recently re-elected on the platform of an open town openly arrived at, is father-in-law of an- other speed king, Walter Johnson of the Senators.-DETROIT NEWS. That rattle that seems to come from the left rear brake-rod and grows as you speed up to 50 m. p. h., may, of course, be only a motor- cycle officer.-DETROIT NEWS. "Have you thought," s a y s a household editor, "of trying spin- ach with cottage cheese?" Possibly. DAILY POME Each for all and all for many, Help to overcome the pall. Lily Pons cannot speak English; It's a fine world after all. . * * We're all breathing freely again now that the mill tax cut has safe- ly been crushed by the boys in blue up at Lansing, the University is go- ing to have just oodles and oodles of money to spend, and we want to be the first to suggest what should be done with it. We must admit we have slight personal interest in the thing, but then, who hasn't? As soon as the senators can load this year's ,mill tax money on the trucks and ship it down here we wish the Regents would send the B&G boys out to dig some more trenches on the campus. Of all the wonderful improvements the Uni- versity has instituted since we have been in residence here, the business of digging trenches on the campus and filling them up is doubtless the most highly commendable. We can- not say too much in praise of the practice. Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Hilda Burke, Soprano, Eleanor Reynolds, contralto, Palmer Chris- tian, organist, and the Children's Festival Chorus present the fol- lowing program: Overture, The Scret of Sus: nu"..'Volf-1"f.Irai Aria, 'n"itorna incitor' from "Aida".. Vei Omagun Solos Fugue in C' . i" -+-----.-------..................1 A Mari.........................Reger assaaglia........................ Ihwerbv 'Arioso'........................1landel Songs Thourt like unto a Flower. Itubinstein Thew Maiden's W ih................. Chopin Lullaby. ......................Brahms Scenes from ans i and rete ...I I uperd ineik Cantata "Old johnny Appleseed"...........aul FOURTH FESTIVAL CHORUS: Ig- nace Jan Paderewski, pianist, and the Chicago Symphony Or- chestra under Frederick Stock present the following program: I'olonaise..................iszt Synmphony No. ? in I) NMa.jor......... Beethoven Concerto for Piano and Orchestra.. ..aderewski l'ia11 Solos ......................hopinl N octrtii ) II. I IMajor ixaurlruiL F :sharp Minor l'tude A Mior Scherzo 13IFiat Minor SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI 11 I May Festival Hill Auditorium, May 13, 14, 15, 16. THIRD CONCERT, "Old Johnny Appleseed" by Gaul. Hilda Burke, Soprano; Eleanor Reynolds, Con- tralto; Palmer Christian, Organ. ist, Orchesttral accompaniment; Children's Festival Chorus; Eric Delamarter and Juva Higbee, Conductors, Friday afternoon. FOURTH CONCERT, Ignace Jan Padercwski, Pianist; Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Frederick Stock, Conductor, Friday Evening. I 1 11 1 . I I KIL LINS GRAVEL COMPANY Telephone 7112 I JEWEhSR AND OPTOMETRIST Nickels Arcade that EXTRA somethmg ... . __-- i .,,' y '4 'y c x i .l 7 X x r k x x t c x r -J . r + ... ..,,, , .y , , " ? "' y? . -r 3 J ..} d - h ..,. + -} '+' =!- ,, - . . .4 -4 y CLICQUOT hacs it! IT'S that smoother, richer mellower flavor that makes Clicquot Club the fair-haired favorite of many a campus party. It blends well with any company because it is a per- fect blend itself. -MV710 wom 0 m A Review Earl V. Moore last night repeated the splendid, comprehensive read- ing of Pierne's oratorio which he gave here three years ago. The work, on second hearing, seems far less successful than one had con- sidered it. Pierne is trying to evoke a very remote figure: a figure which in his cosmic embrace of the uni- verse is somewhat incomprehensible. Yet Pierne has at his command (besides a fairly flexible orchestral technique) only a conventionalized nineteenth century melodic line. He handles that type of line with abundant nuance. But it remains, I think, too inevitably associated in our minds with nineteenth century romantic love to make Francis really credible as a thirteenth cen- tury mystic. Because of his peculiar insistence on this line (which oc- casionally gets insipid with its drooping intervals) Pierne's Francis becomes a somewhat saccharine and undiscriminating humanitari- an. Pierne is primarily concerned with Francis' great Love. But he takes it very simply (very melodi- cally). Almost never does that .love tremble with the depth of despair FIFTH CONCERT, Ruth Breton, Violinist; Chicago Symphony Or- chestra, Frederick Stock, Conduc- tor, Saturday afternoon. SIXTH CONCERT, "Boris Go- dunof" in "English by Mussorgsky. Cyrena Van Gordon, Contralto; Walter Widdop, Tenor; Nelson Eddy, Baritone; Chase Baromeo, Baritone; Fred Patton, Bass; Chi- cago Symphony Orchestra; The University Choral Union, Earl V. Moore, Conductor, Saturday Eve- ning. WANT ADS PAY r3jtiyl ' ,,l,,i I , I ;i a J ' gig _ , l , y 1 ' c e' p' / r 31 '"4 1 «.u G a; f b - GINGER ALES L41 iUcy -4/olde n - o c §Jthree 9iauorite 9lavors on any Campus DAILY POEM (something new) See the pretty Bee and Gee boys Blush in passing Newberry Hall. See how coyly they ignore it; It's a fine world after all oh yeah? *3 * * ANDY has just lurched in with something that he seems to think is pretty,important. Somehow we couldn't seem to make much sense out of it. What do you think of it? Pretty good, eh? . . . We thought not. Hmm. We'll see Andy later.I * .* * Dear Uncle Patrick: What with fall classification, the swingout fight, and fall classification the campus is in an uproar, these days. (Uproar and at 'em, Britannica rules the waves!) The prospective seniors are having the swellest. time of all. At least they are free to take advanced courses in Forestry and Contemporary Drama, and at last they can schedule nothing but afternoon classes. One of them dashed up; to us only yesterday and said excitedly (we aren't feeling very good ourselves, what with him waving an election card under our nose), "Look! I can sleep until a quarter of eleven Mondays, Wednesdays, AND Fridays!" We older ones need not smile indulgently at this outburst, though. Can't you remember back when you were 'a junior and used to get up to go to one o'clocks, even going without breakfast to avoid distressing your professor? Of course you do, and you don't need to deny it with that silly smirk on your face. Just think about those days when you sleep all after- noon, after exhausting yourself studying all night. Life is not so simple, after all. RAGGEDY ANDY. AHUNTING WE MUST GO DEPT. Now before we tell you about the brilliant new idea (well, new, any- way) we've had, please be warned that we understand that you may not sympathize with our enthusi- asm about this thing, but anyway, be tolerant. Give a guy a chance. Come on, you big mug, get off 'im. You may even think the whole business is silly as anything. Maybe it is. You're probably right. Well, all right, all right. We're not argu- ing. We thought that as long as half of Michigan's football games and practically all of the baseball games aire held in driving rain, while out in Arizona the dry farmers have an awful timeamaking things grow, we might be able to effect a switch by which the athletic association might be transported to Arizona and Ferry field and its environs be devoted to the culture of hay or which evoked it, which gave it dig- nity and depth. It was a burden of woe which made St. Francis' heart expand. One never feels that in Pierne's music, I think. Pierne's rather too facile conception of his task appeared perhaps most clearly in the scene with the Birds. The sublime import of Francis' sermon (the despair for his beloved man- kind implied in such a line as "let man alone forget his Lord" and the eager turn to some of God's purer, less subtle, less burdened creations for solace) was not very well con- veyed through an orchestral tex- ture which was trying to resurrect the scene (the sound of the birds etc). We ourselves could have im- agined the scene. The attempt to do it musically only results in a r a t h e r strained prettiness. The emotions of Francis were the sub- stance to the expression of which all musical elements should have been bent. As it was, this substance was left to a thin melodic line and the scene lacked the depth which it should have had to be in any significant way related to its sub- ject. Similarly, the whole scene of Francis and Lady Poverty was tri- vial, and uninspired music, entire- ly inadequate to the meaning of Francis' wilful self-degradation- the impulse which stirred all Eu- rope of the thirteenth century. Only something like the unmetri- cal, unmelodic recitative as Bach uses it in the St. Matthew Passion could be profoundly integral with the way St. Francis felt his words. When Pierne got nearest to this type of more flexible musical speech (in Francis' address to the Sun "All praise to thee, O Lord, for all thy things created") he seemed to be at his best. All in all, though, the Oratorio (with the exception of portions of the Stigmata scene and the ;closing elegy) is peculiarly thin romanticism-tenderly sanctimon- ious rather than profoundly sacred, almost never convincing as a musi- cal transposition of one of the pro- found mediaeval religious experi- ences. Its attractiveness persists (even through two hearings). Its deficiencies only appear when one considers the music in relation to its subject. Mr. Moore, his chorus, and the soloists seemed to do extremely well by the score. Frederick Jagel handled the Francis role-which in its demands must be very fright- enineg-verv sensitively. is ice I V' !CIO Just be* fore bedtime Do YOU ever get hungry late at eight? Just drop in at the campus restaurant and order a bowl of crunchy- crisp Kellogg's Rice Krispics. Enjoy with milk or cream-fruits or honey added. It's delicious-and so easy to digest, you'll sleep like a top! Try it tonight. Kellogg's Rice Krispies are nourishing rice bubbles that actually crackle in milk or cream. Fine for break- fast. Treat for a quick lunch. Ask that this "different" cereal be served in your fraternity dining-room. RICE "R SP ES BEAD OE 3' The most popular cereals served in the dining-rooms of American w I colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They include Au BRAN, PEP Bran Flakes, Corn R IC E