THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sorority Property Tax High, State Report Sh ['GUARDS CALLED TO QUELL RIOTS IN SPAIN; HALT CHURCH LOOT) i nl n ELECTA' T[O OPEN ORAMATI SEASQON YURKAPLAYS LEAD I.. Ht- ANN ARBOR' NEWS-BRIEFS FORSTR SC HO L .TO DEVELOP AftEA 11 City; t; ODE Henderson Reports Successful Performance of Actress in Boston. REGARDS PLAY HIGHLY Says Right Way to Get Dramatic Values Is to Leave Play 'Alone' in Acting. Complete success for Sophocles' "Electra" present this week in Jor- dan hall, Boston, was reported in a telegram from Robert Henderson, director of the production, which will open the Dramatic Season here and sor- ed higher 1 the city, blic utili- :rt made commis- ent of-its rt reveals,f JAMES B. PARKER Two Drivers Arrested DI ES ATHOSPIT AL Karl Litzenberg, 418 N. Division street, instructor of English in the Resident Succumbs to Injres University, was arrested for going of Automobile Accident. 38 miles per hour on Packard street. Judge Bert E. Fry fined Litzenberg James B. Parker, 719 Packard $10 and costs of $4.45. Street, who was critically injured John St. George, 1707 South Boul- Wednesday night in an automobile evard was arrested for driving 39 acendy gt inich an wombo miles per hour on Packard street. accident in which a woman who - . has been identified as Pauline bijeg CoffIe Thomas of Detroit was killed, died this morning at the Highland Park Cars driven by Mrs. William W. hospital, Detroit. Parker failed to Baumgardner, Washtenaw Apart- recover consciousness after the ments, and Mrs. Herbert Edds, 410 crash which occurred at the corner N. State street, collided today at the corner of Madison avenue and of Six Mile road and Northwestern Ashley strete. Neither driver was highway. hdwre nteUi- _______ Parkery. r.t. hurt, but both cars were damaged. versity branch of the Ann Arbor Savings bank fore the past seven Man Dies From Liquor years; he was a reporter, then a A book-keeper, and at his death a i After drinking too much liquor, teller. Mike Lacey, Y.M.C.A., died yester- He is survived by his wife and day morning in the city jail. Lacey three-month-old son, his parents, was brought in from 603 N. Fourth and a sister, Mrs. V. O. Nelson, 927 street in an ambulance. S. State street. Funeral services will be held PROF. MU YSKENS Monday at the Hildinger funeral home, and the burial will be in Coldwater.T Eleven Thousand Pine Seedlings Planted by Students, Says Ramsdell. Martial law was necessary to quell anti-religious riots in Spain when nhobs burned and looted Catholic institutions. A Spanish guard is shown here seeking to control the crowds in Madrid when marital law was declared. Today's Radio Programs (Eatern Standard Time) , on _as. s' erty is its ac- commission, he purpose n as to the y in Wash- vs 'that cor- Ked at 69.71 value, and est on the f~ its actual d at ugh few complaints have ceived by Herbert W. Crip- y assessor, attempts are be- le this year to cut valuation on fraternity and sorority as other property because drop in property values. questioned as -to what as- t will be made on the five ties closed last Februaryf ult of liquor raids, Crippen t it may be possible to re- ie assessments. Some of e said, will probably be un- pay the assessments. Arbor Assessment Made. total assessed valuation in 'bor during 1930 was $53,- not including University y which is exempt, Crippen ssessments are made yearly basis of two-thirds of act- nation. As on assessment may be from the local board of re- hich meets in June, to the x commission, but decisions boards are seldom reversed, ted out. ISURYOUIDI In, connection with the observ- ance t h r o u g h o u t the British Commonwealth of Nations of the n a t i on a1 holiday dedicated to Queen Victoria and to the additions made to the empire during her reign, Prime Minister Ransay Mac- Donald will broadcast from London. Owing to the changes which are expected to be made in the consti- tution of the British empire, Mac- Donald is expected to take advant- age of the occasion fortakstatement of his government's imperial policy. Originating in London, the broad- cast' will come over the Columbia channels at 2:45 this aftenoon over stations WXYZ, WFBL, and W&R. Henry Burbig, pioneer radio com- edian, will return to the air tonight at 7:15 o'clock over stations WEAN, WFBL, and WGR. In his'new series, Burbig will be assisted by Nat Bru- siloff and his orchestra. Burbig's presentations will last fifteen min- utes. Although chiefly in Jewish dialect, they include variations and new ideas in connection with his burlesque of the old fables. A special performance of the old classic, "Damon and Pythias," will be given aboard Hank Simmon's Show Boat "Maybelle" and broad- cast to the listeners over stations WXYZ, WEAN, and WFBL at 9 o'clock tonight. Hank Simmons takes the role of Damon, while De Witt Schuyler is the Pythias of the play. Jovial Ted Lewis and his Musical Clowns tonight will be heard on the radio playing some of the most popular singable tunes of the day. "The Land of Jazz," "Sister Kate," "Silver Moon," and "Bluin' the SCHWAB PREDICTS- BUSINESS RETURN Says End of Liquidation Good Sign of Improvement. NEW YORK, M a y 22.--(I)- Charles M. Schwab told the Ameri- can Iron & Steel institute today that there was reason to believe liquidation was about over. Mr. Schwab, chairman of the Bethle- hem Steel corporation, is president of the institute, which held its semi-annual meeting here. "There has been so much talk aboutathe future that we have lost sight of the extent to which the deflation has gone," he said, point- ing to the long /decline in commod- ity, security, wholesale and retail prices. "There are many signs of stirring in our economic life. The very fact that we have faced this situation and adjusted ourselves to it is a preliminary to the better times, to the favorable upward reaction. We want to keep pulling for the shore. We must not lose headway by rest- ing on our oars, but we can be cheered by the knowledge that the tide is coming in." One of the most encouraging facts, he said, was that the coun- try had met this depression "with much less fear, less distress and with much more organized intelli- gence than in any previous period of hard times." BRIGHT .SPOT 802 PACKARD ST. TODAY, 11:00 to 2:00 EGGS, BACON,_TOAST Blues" will be clowned through in typical Ted Lewis style over sta- tions WWJ, WTAM, IWGY at 6:30 o'clock. Beauteous Ballads will be heard for the first time tonight. This pro- gram of burlesque of the songs of the gay and wild 90's can be heard from stations WEAF, WGY, and WLS at 7 o'clock tonight. 2:45-Ramsay MacDonald speech from London k -WXYZ. WFBL. WGR 5:00-Ted Husinros sport slants - WXYZ, VVLBW, WBBM 5:30-Smith Ballew and his orchestra-WJZ, S WBAL, WREN 6:00-Morton Downey with Nat Brusiloff- WABO. WGR, WLBW 6:30-Armand Veesey and his orchestra- WXYZ, WEAN, WGR' Ted Lewis and his Mlusical clowns-- WWJ, WGY, WTAM 6:35-Final baseball scores-WJR 6:45--KREMLIN ART QUINTET --WGAR, WJZ, WREN 7:00--Burlesque on the songs of the gay 90's -WEAF, WLS, WGY 7:15-HENRY BURBIG, comedian--WFBL, WEAN, WGR 7:30-Silver Flute-WWJ, WGY, WEAF 7:45-MARY CHARLES with Nat Brusiloff- WFBL, WBCM, WKBW 8:00-Harbor Lights-WJZ, WGAR Symphony orchestra, Erno Rapee - WWJ, WTAM, WLW 5:30-Domino orchestra-WJR, WLW, KDKA Secretary of Treasury Andrew W. Mel- lon-WXYZ, WFBL, WEAN 9:00-B. A ROLFE and his orchestra-WWJ, WTAM, WGN CUcKOO program - WJR, WREN, WGAR HANK SIMMONS' Show Boat-WXYZ, WFBL, WEAN 9:45-Tony Cabooch, One Man Radio Show- WXYZ, WEAN, WKBW 10:00-Troubador of the Moon, Lanny Ross- WTIC, WGY, WRC BERT LOWN and his Biltmore orches- tra-WXYZ, WFBL, WLBW 10:30-WILL OSBORNE and his orchestra- WXYZ, WFBL 11:00-Jack Albin and his orchestra-WTAM, WKY, WEAF PAUL WHITEMAN and his orchestra- WXYZ, WFBL, WFBM 11:30-Charlie Agnew and his orchestra-WJ'Z, WGAR, WREN 12:00-Ambassadors--WOW The Doodesockers-WLW 12:30-R.K.O. St.sLouis theatre-KWK 1:00--Dance orchestra-KOA- } Midnight Merry-makers-KWK What's Going on THEATRER Lydia Mendelssohn - "The Blue Anchor" by Richard Humphreys. Michigan-Duncan Renaldo and Edwina Booth in "Trader Horn." Majestir - Robert Montgomery, Dorothy Jordan, Clif tEdwards, Ho- bart Bosworth in "Shipmates." Wuerth-Harry Langdon and Ben Lyon in "A Soldier's Plaything." Varsity Band to Give Three More Concerts next week. Henderson's telegram stateu that Blanche Yurka received an ovation1 as she played the lead before a capacity house. "My idea of the right way to get dramatic values in the acting of a play, and in directing it," Miss Yurka said in an interview recent- ly, "is to leave it alone. The great- er the play, the more easily it will carry itself." Classic Plays "Perfect." "I feel," she continued, "that the great classic 'plays are so nearly perfect, so strongly characterized, and so subtle that we should deal with them reverently and simply in putting them on the stage. We1 should merely strive in a humble way to do just what the play indi- cates. That is what we are trying so keenly to do in the "Electra." "A great play," she went on, "is never finished for-the actor or the director. Every performance reveals something new in it, as to acting possibilities. That is one of the reasons why I am so certain that the Greek masterpieces are thrill- ing theatrical performances, for one never exhausts one's part. Of them all-with the possible excep-r tion of 'Oedipus Rex' - I regard 'Electra' as the best." In discussing the methods of the modern theatre, Miss Yurka de- clared that " great technique is needed to provide for the kind of acting that the public demands."- "Above all," she said, "an actor' should never go past the point where an audience refuses to be- lieve him." Was Inspired by Bernhardt. "It has always been one of my most cherished wishes to play the role of the passionate Electra," Miss Yurka stated. "For the last five years I have studied the part which attracted Bernhardt, Eleonora Duse; Margaret Anglin, and Sybil Thorn- "Of all the inspirations that have illumined my work," she continued, "I count foremost the last perform- ances -in America of the Duse. I saw her in three consecutive plays, and for the firs. time in my life. From the last of them I went forth to wander the streets like someone dazed, for hours upon hours." "The story of Electra' is sim- plicity itself as Sophocles wrote it," Miss Yurka concluded. "More im- portantly, it is as real today as it was 2000 years ago-all the emo- tions move 1A today as profoundly and deeply as in the times of the, Greeks." RIGHTMIRE SCRE OHIO STATE RIOT University -President Declares Youthful Judgment to Be Cause of Trouble. COLUMBUS, 0., May 22. -(P)- Taking cognizance of recent agita- tions on the campus, President G. W. Rightmire of Ohio State univer- sity issued a statement today in the official university bulletin in which he said "the state of the uni- versity relations has not been so critical for a quarter of a century." Referring to the recent mass meeting of students agitating a strike over compulsory military training, the president said the meeting was "born of half-knowl- edge, adolescent judgment, lack of experience, and somewhat influ- enced by a body of writers who see little good in our present day civil- ization." He continued: "The university throughout 60 years of existence has been remarkably free from ill- considered or socially destructive agitation with which the world out- side has at times been disturbed. The university has been a whole- some, socially constructive and sound educational force in the life of the state, and almost without exception the students have been diligent in their work and have taken a sane and well-considered view of the world and their place in it. "Recently, however, certain stu- dents have come forward as critics of 'the university regulations and procedures, and have freely attack- ed university policies. .. U:ER P'rof. John . iuys en s, oi pnone tics in the speech department, said yesterday that he would teach this summer in the speech department at the University of Southern Cal- t In accordance with his last wish, Robert Cree, an ardent angler of Folkestone, England, was buried recently in the English Channel. ifornia at Los Angeles. Professor Muyskens will teach three courses, in phonetics, in speech improvem4, and in speech pathology. The enrollment in these courses is, Professor Muyskens said, already large and many more are expected to join them.E Last summer Professor Muyskens taught these three subjects at the University of Wisconsin and in the summer of 1932 he plans to give lectures before the National Asso- ciation of Teachers of Speech in Detroit. YALE UNIVERSITY - Graduate students here have been warned not to use the grain alcohol in the laboratories for beverage purposes. Wajg esti . Now :00, 3:40, 7:00, 9:00 P.M. Shove off on this Cruise of Laughs, Romance and 1001 thrills! I . f t' 7 " y) !' Z Y Eleven thousand pine seedlings were planted last week on the Uni- versity biological station grounds, according to Prof. W. F. Ramsdell who has just returned from the station at Douglas ake. In view of this, Dr. George R. La- Rue, director of the biological sta- tion, announced that the forestry school is now co-operating in de- veloping a considerable portion of the wild land area of the station into a model forestuproperty for general scientific study purposes. Professor Ramsdell is in charge of such work with members of the forestry faculty, and he is collabor- ating with Dr. LaRue and his staff. Much of the University's 3,500 acres at the station is typical of the logged-off, burned-over terri- tory of upper Michigan, and a large part of the native seedling growth has been killed by fires during the last 15 years. Here it is that arti- ficial reforestation is planned. . / e r ><:,,; s 4; x .. LTicEgan LAST TIM4ES TODAY I1 I A ROMANCE OF SAVAGE PASSIONS! AVISTA OF 1000 NEW JUNGLE' THRILLS! 1 E 4 a tip:; eclares Congress Should to Adjust a Steadier Flow of Income. :NGTON, -May 22.-(IP)- adjust governmental ex- o receipts is puzzling the secretary Mills is convinc-' ome changes are necessary, Iso thinks the $984,268,517 iat existed Tuesday is not asis for consideration of, The ,whole country's raving about it! .{ Ey, Dorof in T Dorot tary of brary,m wide co the Roy repared a speech outlining ws for the National Associa- Mutual Savings Banks con-. Thursday, and since he was stant 'Secretary Ballantine le address. At the same time, ternal revenue bureau an- d its collections for the .first nths of the 1931 fiscal year 60,346,408 less than the cor- ling period a year earlier. are faced with a large def- e said. 'Does this mean that have been reduced too far t the taxes that have been d do not constitute a suffi- well-balanced system to pro- 1 even flow of revenue from year?" ig other things, he found 'ith the fact that two-thirdsf government's revenue comes! acome taxes, which fluctuate 'with business peaks and de- ns. should so adjust out tax! that year in and year out vill be no great variation be- receipts and expenditures comparatively small deficit tr will be offset by a compar- smmr,11l sirrn1irc th nvt Three concerts will be given in a prize the next two weeks by the Varsity portabl band, it was announced yesterday Pen sh by Robert A. Campbell, treasurer local rE of the University, and sponsor of pany. the organization. Miss t Next Tuesday night, the band one of will play for the annual Lantern more t night proglam on Palmer field and new tyr on the following night, the organ- ization will give one of its spring Symj concerts on the campus. On June 3, it will make its final appearance until Commencement when it plays for another spring concert in front The of the library. chestra On Tuesday night, June 16, the of the band will begin its rehearsals for ium as the Commencement week programs on the and will end the season when it series,1 plays for the annual ceremonies rector on Ferry field. nouncet * rr-=~=--t a Zt~A r r~. - - . - --___-_ thy Chipman Wins ypewriter Contest hy J. Chipman, '19, secre- the William L. Clements li- was a winner in a nation- ntest recently completed by yal Typewriter company. As Miss Chipman received a e typewriter through Rider's op, 302 South State street, epresentatives of the com- Chipman's entry was judged the 20 best letters among than 500,000 describing a pe of free-shift typewriter. phony Orchestra to Present Concert University Symphony or- will give its final concert year June 7 in Hill auditor- one of the regular programs School of Music concert Prof. David M. Mattern, di- of the organization, an- d yesterday. ,ii The biggest thriller in years! Never a romance like it! - I I LAST TIMES TODAY f 't .1 THE BIG GUN OF WAR COMEDIESI. WARN E RlOS' Mtrs 'i II II;AM w ---- A_ 11 'I Among the Best and at Reasonable Prices Bombshells of laugh- ter! Explosions of joy! A sweeping barrage of howls and screams!3 Wik Harry Langdon and BEN LYON PUTUMS ROBERT MONTGOMERY with ERNEST TORRENCE DOROTHY JORDAN HOBART BOSWORTH CLIFF EDWARDS EXTRA ADDED I1 Hai the New Star-. FREEMAN'S, _ip ip ,I