THE MICHICAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1931 U-- . hed every morning except Monday dur- University year by the Board in Control at Publications. er of Western Conference Editorial Asso- ssociated Press is exclusively entitled to for. republication of all news dispatches to it or not otherwise credited in this .d the local news published herein. ed at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Miebi- second class matter. Specialt rate of granted by Third Assistant Postmaster ription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. s: Ann Arbor rss Building, Maynar d Phones: Editorial, 492.5; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY FRANK E. COOPER, City Editor ditor ..............Gurney Williams I irector.. .......... alter W. Wilds t City Editor........ Harold 0. Warren Editor..............Joseph A. Russell 's Editor. .~.......Mo ry L. Bohrnyer D)rama, Books...........in. J. (Gorman Refleetions.......... Bcrtrarn J. Askwith -i News Editor.......harlesIt. Sprowi ph Editor............George A. Stauter ditor .................wnm. E. .l'yper NIGHT EDITORS h Conger Charles R. Sprowil Forsythe Richard L. Tobin Nichol Harold 0. Warren Reindel Sports Assistants f. Fullertons A . Cullen Kennedy Charles A. Sanford REPORTEPS M. Cooley Robert L. Pierce Frank Richard Racine . Glbreth rrl Seifert iedberg Jerry E. Rosenthal Goodman George A. Stauter Helper John s. Thomas fones John S. Townsend j J. Mieyers women, who had nothing more in mind than to spend an easy four years before starting work. The present rules prevent this to some degree, but not adequately. Any relaxation of the present barriers would prove fatal to the academic life of the university. Music and Drama I MM5 r DEAD LANGUAGES DIE Yale has only recently announced that Latin and Greek had been dropped as entrance and gradua- tion requirements, and that the former degree of Bachelor of Philo- sophy would not be given any longer. To Michigan students, who have entered and graduated under these conditions for many years, this step seems rather late. Latin and Greek were consideredj all-important in the days whenJ sources had to be studied in these+ lauguages, and when they were held' in awe because they had tradition- ally been regarded as indispensable. The abolishment of these require- ments marks the passing of tradi- tion in educational methods, and the adaption of such methods to the conditions of the present day. Latin and 'Greek have always been stressed, moreover, for the training they are supposed to give the mind. Evidently, however, other subjects have been found which prove as stimulating to mental pro- cesses as these did formerly, and are of greater practical value. Old- timers will view this passing of respect for dead languages as a sign of deterioration of the younger generation. It is, however, merely a process of discarding antiquated methods for newer and better ones. Editorial Comment SUPPOSING TRADITIONS DIE (Daily Trojan) nbitz LU °yer imel ee hester Mary McCall (;l Miler Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Claire Trussek BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 LLISTER MABLEY, Business Manager R H. IIALVERSON, Assistant Manager Department Managers in ......Charles. P. Kline ng ... . homas . Davis ing............. William W. Warboys ............orris J. Johnson ion............Robert W. Williamson. ion...............Malrvinl S. Hobacker s.................homas S. Muir s Secretary...... ....Mary J. Kenan Assistants Beglev Noel D. Turner Bishop Don. W. Lyon Brown William Morgan Callahan Richard Strateine:er t .Davis Kecith Tyler isington Richard H. iller htlinger liyron C. Vedder Verner Sylvia Miller Atran hlelen Olsen ailey Aildred Postal ie Convisser Marjorie Rough Fishgrund Mary E. Watts LeMire JohLan is Wiese Laylin SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1931. Night Editor-BEACH CONGER, Jr. JUDICIAL EDUCATIONAL - DECISIONS A recent decision in Ohio, made by a judge in the court of common pleas, to the effect that a state- supported University may not expel' students for scholastic deficiencies,1 but may only compel them to take courses over again, appears rather startling to those who have advo- cated that a University should be judge of the qualifications of its students to remain in school. If affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State of Ohio, a condition which is rather unlikely, this deci- sion would be a severe blow to all state-supported Universities. As a result, they would be flooded with young men and women who had aothing better to do for five or six' years than to loaf through college. Institutions of learning would be-: come little better than second-rate country clubs, a condition in which: dot atfew find themselves today. And the only method with which o combat this measure would be to aise the entrance requirements to1 uch a standard as to make it im- >ossible for those applicants to: enter who had not proved that they3 ould pursue their courses with1 ,rades of C or better.- On the probable basis of this de- ision, however, evenftually even, hat right would be taken away.r However, the theory once held that n institution supported by public unds should be open to each and very citizen of the state, irregard-t ess of his qualifications, has been loomed to oblivion. A college ort university is obviously intended fort uch students who have shown suchI nastery of secondary school sub-s ects as will permit them to con-t inue their studies in a more ad-t anced manner. Hence, entrance re- luirements.i For the above reason, if the caser s carried to the State supremes ourt, the decision will undoubtedly' e reversed, as it should be. A groupe f legislators are qualified to deal a law with fundamental principles. s far as educational institutionsg re concerned. But that they shoulde rescribe conditions under whichg tudents can be admitted or expell-A d is a preposterous assumption." 'or the same reason, it is beyond; ae powers of a court to determine The Daily Californian last weekj commented sadly on dying univer- sity traditions with particular refer- ence to its own. Enthusiam, the Californian maintains, "cannot bel instilled by organized methods. Furthermore, traditions having been sponsored by such enthusiasm do not call for rules to enforce them ... Obviously half-hearted rooting and enforced 'traditions' by means of vigilance committees defeat their own purpose since it is human nature to try to succeed in breaking as many rules as possible. If left to our own resources to support our J university and maintain our tradi- tions we could make a better show- ing. The Californian attributes a lack of spirit on its own campus to "would-be sophistication" growing out of the university's proximity to a large metropolitan district. "Ob- viously," it says, "such sophistica- tion is merely adolescent . . . That traditions are still carried on by a few students is not because they are forced to do so but because they have an advanced understanding of' the meaning of real collegiate sophistication." There seems to be some freedom in the Californian's use of the word sophistication, but we doubt that the so-called sophisticated attitude has less to commend it than the so-called collegiate attitude. The former can be somewhat of a sham and the latter can be farcial, de- pending on the outlook. There is ample reason for eith-er, but in uni- versities surrounded by metropoli- tan districts there is much virtue in interests apart from those denotedr by shouting rah, rah. FOURTH FESTIVAL CONCERTI PROGRAMf Polonaise ........................LisztS Second Synphony............Beethovent A Minor Conerto............Paderewski Piano Solos: Nocturne 1) Flat major ...... ...(hopi Mazurka h' sharp minor. .......Copin1 Etude A Minor............... Chopini Scherzo 1B lat Minor... ,.....Chopin Huongariajn ]Dnce ..............hrahs Huongaria Dance ..............Jramns Noturne .....................Chopin 'traveller's Song...........P'aderewski Ii npromnptuia.................Sc hbe ir A Review The atmosphere last night was filled with the glamour which the passing years have added to one of the most glamorous personali- ties of a by-gone age. And cer- tainly this was right. Whatever the argument that may be produced against Mr. Paderewski's concep- tion of life, art, and the piano, there is no doubt that a whole Fes- tival audience was profoundly stir- red by an old man, vigorously and proudly the romanticist to the end. Paderewski h a s preserved his strength and his sensitivity to the keyboard through' a magnificent turbulent life that has included more than a pianistic career. At the age of seventy-one, still lordly, still superbly eloquent, he is able to remind us of the perennial vi- tality of romanticism, to give a white-heat representation of all that he has meant to music. He i still plays greatly, with unique vi-1 sion and emotional power. One has only reverence for the deep, fiery majesty and profound tenderness which this man can impart to us at the close of his life. Yet it is difficult to be explicit about the exact meaning which lIPaderewski the pianist-considered more or less apart from the circum- stances of last evening-has for ai age which' (it may be fairly as- sumed) no longer feels, thinks, nor plays the piano the way he does. Though Paderewski is (or was) in several senses a superb technician, he is not primarily interested in the piano in the way modern pian- ists are. 'He doesn't seem to know or care about knowing the limita- tions of the piano. He doesn't usef discretion in treating .it. He is not careful to confine his feeling-self to feelings that the piano can real- ly translate. When his imagination actually vaults the piano, he is not averse to making the 'piano roll with an unpleasant thunder-a re- iterated fury which should really signify nothing but actually seems to carry conviction that Paderew- j ski is ,having magnificent emotions,, He is not at all averse to making leonine assaults on the keyboard which far transcend mere accur- acy. All these things appeared in the Concerto, I think. This was pretty specious, third-rate, roman- tic, music. Yet it proved a suitable frame. Paderewski's passionate de- sire to give his heroic will flesh as-! serted itself primarily through his manner of attacking this music; and the Concerto gave a genuine. experience. Several places in the first and third movement Paderew- ski was "riding the storm"~ making thunder. But even when this thun- der became very disagreable, ill-! proportioned sound, it somehow re- j verberated in us with a certain stir-i ring, grandiose .quality. Similarly, the Winter-wind Etude ~was impressive in the experience Ithough it might very easily be pointed out that he played it very badly indeed. Paderewski, it may very properly be said, plays the piano badly. But one has to im- mediately add that while playing the piano badly he manages to say stirring things convincingly. As a romanticist, he is more interested in self-expression than in -either the music or the piano. The admis- sion that he expresses himself eith- er through or in spite of piano and music, is tantamount to saying that he completely realizes his inten- tions. Through peculiarities of tempo and touch he got a certain quality into the two Chopin Nocturnes, a quality of regret and anguished memory, that made them vivid ex- periences. In the last of his encores, a Schubert Impromptu (or Moment Musical) besides an aetherial witch- ery which his delicate touch gave the music there was a deep tender- ness in the silences, in the tremu- lously slow tempo. FIFTH FESTIVAL CONCERT: The Chicago Symphony Orchestra play- ing the Gold mark Overture "In Springtime" and the Bruckner Ninth Symphony, and Ruth Breton, playing the Glazounow violin Con- certo in A minor. BRITISH ARTISTS A Review Brought here under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art association, the exhibit. of the Royal Society of British .Artists is one of outstand- ing distinction. Although the show is marked by. a British individual- ism of reserve, and is divorced from any of the current characteristics of other schools, there are many daing innovations in watercolor technique which create effects that are very unusual in this medium. Watercolors that are not water- colors, that have the finish and the depth of oils, or the fineness of line I which is characteristic of pen and ink work, or that peculiar mass- building which is characteristic of wood blocks, all these things ap- pear in the show. And in color these British' dare to create whole pictures in which there is a mono- tone of dullness, unrelieved. Or again they wash their paper in complimentaries with utterly no accent of contrast. They contradict the usual lightness of watercolor sketches and develope opaqueness which strangely is not heavy, in fact it is even brilliant. To speak generally, once more of the exhibit, the tendency is to veer away from the modelling which has become a complex in so many of the moderns; there is utterly noth- ing sculpturesque about the pic- tures, and comparatively speaking they are rather flat; but they counteract this difficulty by work- ing in distance and continuous flat planes. Or again one finds instances in the show of an architectural in- fluence in some few of the land- scapes done by Littlejohn. By this ,I mean that the composition was arranged in formalized patterns 4ased on architectural forms; the trees were reduced to very definite arch forms. In one case the show presents pure impressionism in the work of Haslehurst: A Grey Day in which he capitalizes sun reflection in the true Monet spirit and The Water Gate of St. John's Hospital, Bruges, where he works with sun- light in relation to the shadows of a brick building. His coloring is delicately translucent and he catches the laziness of warm sun. Outstanding in the collection is the work of David Wilson whose landscapes have almost unlimited depth to them. He also works on a peculiarly rough paper which seems to help to give form to his rolling hills that intersect in many planes. And his coloring seems to be that of a dull day; his drabness is so realistic that he seems to have dipped his brush into a light fog j and used it on his palette. Among the most charming of the contributions was a small painting of Dowe's, a scene at the shore where a small sailing craft is drawn up on the beach. The most appealing quality of this piece is its extreme simplicity. And through this same simplicity, we feel the broad sweep of the enormous hori- zon which hangs low over the sea. The coloring too is simple, confined to few colors of varying tones: blues, whites, greys, and occasional accents. Nor must we pass by the Black- smith Shop by Adrian Hill in. which we have a most interesting amalga- mation of varying highlights in the difficult task of distinguishing sur- face textures of different metals. Out of the low light of the dingy shop and with the shiny darkness of iron and steel, Hill has made an exceptionally brilliant picture. Mary Sampson's Port Isaac, a village street scene shot with patch- es of sunlight has a piquant rusti- city about it; and R. F. Millard's Country Lane in Yorkshire is de- lightfully surprising in that he uses great globbish bulks for his trees dashed all through with sunlight, and then adds the individual touch of outlining them with a heavy black line. Throughout the whole show one will notice that many of the men have no very definite style which marks them as this or that. One of SPECIALIZING in PORCH BOXES and wide variety of fine budding plants. Prompt Service Michigan Flower Growers, Inc. Open evenings until 9:00 Phone 21715 CROSLEY AMRAD BOSCH SHOP WE SELL ,- . WE RENT R adios WE SERVICB Tel. 2-2812 615 E. Williams WANT ADS PAY Affilmumlmmmlm D cE .y 1021 Maiden Lane Tonight and Sunday STOP IN AT BURR PA'TTERSON'S SPRING Jewelry Sale Huge Savings On Fine Fraternity Jewelry 603 Church Street WANT ADS PAY loan& ranger's BaUroom 61THE CADETS" Under direction of TomCornell, I & I I Dancing 9-1 FA " I :At - FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, Minister METHODIST STUDENTS CENTER WESLEYAN GUILD Cor. State and East Huron 12:00 Noon-Mrs. Fisher's class will meet at Wesley Hail. 6:00 P. M.-Kappa Phi will have charge of the meeting and they are planning a surprise. All stu- dents are cordially invited to at- tend promptly at 6 o'clock. 10:30 A. M.-Morning "FREEDOM" Dr 'Fisher. !fBLEB ITRAM IMPONftIANT. STCAMI*9 . 1 1ON Si. ANN AKII Worship. There will be no evening worship. 7:00 P. M.-Social Hour. THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH E. Huron, below State R. Edward' Sayles, Minister Howard R. Chapman, Minister of Students. 9:30 A. M--The Church School. Wallace Watt, Superintendent. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Mr. Sayles will preach on "PAY- ING THE PRICE." 12:00 N.-University Students at Guild House. "Reasons for Belief in God." Mr. Chapman will lead the discussion.. 5:30 P. M.-The social hour with refreshments. Come early. 6:30 P. M.-The topic, "Science and God," will be presented by Miss Davidson, Mr. Vander Kam, Mr. Bell, Miss Davis, Mr. Innes. Arthur &rnhart will be in charge. HILLEL FOUNDATION 615 East University Rabbi Bernard Heller 11:15 A. M. - Doctor Raymond Hoekstra of the Philosophy De- partment will speak on "The Ideal and the Real in Religion." 7:30 P. M.-Mr. Milton Alexander of Detroit will address the open student forum. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Allison Ray Heaps, Minister Sunday, May 17, 1931 9:30 A. M.-Church School. : i 11 10:45 A. M.-Morning Sermon by Rev. Heaps. "Empty Houses." Worship. Subject: ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division and Catherine Streets Reverend Henry Lewis, Rector Reverend Duncan E. Mann, Assistant 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.-Church School (Kin- dergarten at 11 o'clock). 11:00 A. M.-Morning Prayer, ser- mon by the Rev. Henry Lewis, "A Pathway in Religion." 6:00 P. M.-Student Supper, speaker Mr. Frank Olmstead, "Ad- venturous Religion." No Student Fellowship for remainder of year. Professor Laski makes the inter- esting, and largely justifiable, com- ment that American colleges and universities place too much em- phasis on lectures and examina- tions. The result is a confused mass of largely unrelated facts being mastered by the student, with little conception of their deeper signifi- cance. In other words, the Amer- ican system makes for shallow edu- cation. If there be any truth in this ini- tial premise it would be well for the faculty and students of the Uni- versity of North Carolina to con- sider the merits of the quarter sys- tem, and whether we should return to the semester system. Under the quarter system there is a rush to complete the subject matter of the course- high pres- sure is the order of the day. Uni- versity life is one mid-term, one examination after another. There is some monotony about this busi- ness of attending lectures on a given course five successive days in every week. Too much of the work given here and in every other American university is the so-called "spoon-fed" variety. The quarter system accentuates this tendency. It is true that the quarter system FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division Sts. Merle H. Anderson, Minister Alfred Lee Klaer, Associate Pastor. Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwell, Counsellor of Women. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "Music." 12:00 Noon-Student Classes. 5:30 P. M.--Social Hour for Young People. 6:30 P. M.-Young People's Meet- ing. Speaker: Dr. R. O. Egeberg on "Personal Experiences in the Hospitals of Russia." ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St. at Fifth Ave. E. C. Stellhorn, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Sunday School. FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 11 10:30 A. M.-Regular ice. Sermon topic: Immortals." Morning Serv- "Mortals and 11 :45 A. M.-Sunday School follow- ing the morning service. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH (Evangelical Synod of N. A.) Fourth Ave. between Packard and Williams Rev. Theodore R. Schmale 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. 10:00 A. M.-Morring Worship. Sermon topic: "Our Lord's Parting Promise." 11:00 A. M.--erman Service. 7:00 P. M.-Young People's League. 7:30 P. M.-Wednesday testimonial meeting. Evening The Reading Room, 10 and 11 State Savings Bank Building, is open daily from 12 to 5 o'clock, except Sundays and legal holidays. ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH Third and West Liberty Sts. C. A. Brauer, Pastor Above all, there was the marvel- ous phenomenon of his strength. Never during the evening was there merely mechanical motion-where a tired mind wanders and leaves nervous habit to rule the hands. This man was feeling with his LIBERAL STUDENT'S UNION State and Huron Streets FELLOWSHIP OF LIBERAL RELIGION (Unitarian) Sunday, May 17, 1931