PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930 - - - -- Published every morning except Monday Suring 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- patehes credited to it or not otherwise credited to thie paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the postoflice at Ann , Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 r MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY City Editor Frank E. Cooper News Editor. ........... .Gurney Williams Editorial Djirector........... Walter W. Wilds S oits Editor............... Joseph A. Russell Women's Editor........... Mary L. Behymer Music andDrama .........WilliamL . Gorman Assistant News Editor....;Charles R. Sprowl Telegraph Editor George A. Stauter NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Carl S. Forsythe Richard L. Tobin David M. Nichol Harold O. Warren Sports Assistants Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy. Robert Townsend Reporters Walter S. Baer, Jr. Wilbur J. Myers Irving J. Blumberg Robert' L. Pierce Donald 0. Boudeman Sher M. Quraishi George T. Callison C. Richard Racine Thomas M. Cooley Jerry E. Rosentha George Fisk. George Rubenstein Y ternard W. Freund Charles A. Sanford Morton Frank Karl Seiffert Saul Friedberg Robert F. Shaw Frank B. Gilbreth Edwin M. Smith Jack Goldsmith George A. Stauter Roland Goodman Alfred R. Tapert WilliamG11.IHarris Tohn S.'Townsend James H. Inglis )obert D. Townsend Denton C. Kunze Max It. Weinberg Powers Moulton Joseph F. Zias Lynne Adams Betty Clark Elsie Feldman Elizabeth Gribble rmily G. Grimes Elsie M. Hoffmeye R an Levy Dorothy Magee Mary McCall Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Jean Rosenthal Cecilia Shriver Frances Stewart r Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Claire Trussell Barbara Wright BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER T. HOLLISTER MABLEY Assistant Manager KASPER H. HALVERSON Department Managers Advertising........ ......;harles T. Kline Advertisi............. .. Thomas M. Davis Advertising ............William W. Warboys Service..........Norris 3. Johnson Publication ............Robert W. Williamson Circulation......... Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts . Th..rlomas S. Muir Business Secretary ..... .. .Mary J. $enan Assistants Thmas 9. Hasting Harry R. Begley William Brown Richard H. Biller Vernon Bishop William W. Davis ff. Fred Schaefer Joseph Gardner Ann Verner T~orthea Waterman Alice McCully Dorothy Bloomgard Dorothy Laylin Ssephine Convisser Rernice Glaser Hortense Gooding s Byron V. Vedder Erle Kigbtlinger Richard Stratemeier Abe Kirshenbaum Noel D. Turner Aubrey L. Swinton Wesley C. Geisler Alfred S. Remsen Laura Codling Ethel Constas Anna Goldberg en Virginia McComb Joan Wiese Miary- Watts Marian Atran Sylvia Miller the library difficult for faculty, that it would be inconvenient to have the library and classrooms in separate buildings, and that num- erous ' physical characteristics of the proposed building were imprac- tical and stumbling blocks in the program of expansion previously decided upon by the faculty, the president augmented his reasons for opposing the acceptance of the gift by accepting and supporting the views of one of his faculties. This example discloses a mani- fest divergence in the policy of the Regents and that of the faculties. It is not to be denied that the Regents are a most in- tegral and excellent agency in Michigan's corporate organization. Ours is not a brief against the attitude of the Regents as a non- political body responsible to the state for the spending of its money. But we do hold that the obvious good of having the chief adminis- trative influence exerted by those in closest association with the Uni- versity itself should be realized more fully. With President Ruth- ven's initial committment and the painful examples of the past as impetus, the faculties, it is our hope, will undertake a progressive policy of initiative and responsi- bility in dealing with dormant changes of teaching and adminis- trative methods. Campus Opinion ( ontributors aen asked to he brief, confining thenisexes to less than 3oo words if possible. Anonymous or- nlnoications will be disregarded. The names of conmmnicats will, however, he regarded as corqliilntial, upon re- pqlest. L etes publAisedl should not lbe construed as epressing the editorial opinion of Thle 1Daily. To the Editor: Football season being in our midst, squawks about tickets are of course in order. I write to you, not because I have any complaint to make myself, but because I should like the solution of a mystery. Can you, or any of the readers of the Michigan Daily, tell me what be- comes of the 50,000 tickets for seats situated between the boal posts. Were I a Philo Vance, Sherlock Holmes or Chief O'Brien I should not seek your aid; but because I am not, recourse to the columns of your paper seems the only remedy possible. Having made some little study of the situation let me give you a few facts that may be of aid to you in solving the mystery heretofore mentioned. Only 15,000 alumni of the Uni- versity of Michigan live within a radius that makes it possible for them to attend any of the games. Eight thousand studentshpurchase on an average one ticket with every free ticket allowed them by the eUniversity. My mathematical cal- culations show that allowing two tickets to each alumnus capable of coming to the games and two tickets to every student on the campus, a total of approximately 50,000 tickets would thus be used. And now the mystery deepens. In my four years on the campus I have never been able to get seats, except behind the goal posts. Of course I would not blame Mr. Tillotson for this; such a thought is preposterous. He only has charge of the ticket distribution and why should a student who has only been on this campus four years receive anything but tickets behind the goal posts. To begin with, students are the surest customers Mr. Tillot- son has. The price of their coupon book is paid with their tuition and whether the team is good or bad the students must follow its for- tunes. With a business acumen that is remarkable, Mr. Tillotson sees'to it that fifty, forty and thirty yard line seats are sold for the big games to various people; but you can de- pend upon it that none of these people happen to be students ex- cept in the cheering section. Fifty yard line tickets can always be purchased on days before big games at the Detroit Athletic club or any of the large Detroit hotels, but not one is obtainable before the games at the ticket offices. Far be it from me to accuse Mr. Tillotson or any member of the athletic department of discrimin- ation against students, who only 'happen to be the life, the prop and the main support of University life and athletics. This letter is not written in a spirit of ill-feeling or anger because the writer has re- ceived tickets back of the goal posts. Four years of such treatment have served to deaden any resent- ment that I have. r CATWO CHEERS FOR ELMER Well folks, we absolutely main- tain all those nasty things we said about Dan were true. In fact, we remember when he once broke the record for the mile run. He was pulling out all the choke rods ont the old Fords when one owner[ espied him. (Say it isn't so, Dan.{ I dare yah.)* I THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930 Night Editor-DAVID M. NICHOL RESPONSIBLE LFACULTIES. Writing trenchantly and some- what eloquently in the current issue of the Nation, Mr. J. F. Kirk- patrick calls attention to the ex- cellent results achieved by vesting tremendous administrative respon- sibility in the.Faculty Trust of An- tioch college. He points out that the faculty, as well as the student body, shares with the president the wide authority allowed by the board of trustees. The actual manage-. ment of the college is in the hands of the administrative council, made up wholly of faculty members and college officials, who determine salaries, departmental budgets, and all college policies. The faculty is further empowered, by the crea- tion of a trust under the laws of Ohio, to handle the administration of gifts. These powers are extended to the faculty and students in the belief that those people most closely associated with the college should be intrusted with its gov- ernment. Michigan is already committed to an extension of faculty control in administrative matters. As one of the policies set forth in Presi- dent Ruthven's innauguration mes- sage, it was stated that progress in administrative and teaching meth- ods would be the result of faculty views. But when the question of acceptance and disposition of gifts totthe University by the faculty is considered, great bitterness and heat is naturally generated over the issue. This matter has been most acute at Michigan in times past. The im- mediate events surrounding Presi- dent Little's resignation are to the point. While Dr. Little's very direct, often brusque and tactless, manner of dealing with the teaching staff sometimes antagonized its mem- bers, his opinions were greatly in- fluenced by theirs. It had been generally understood that President Little ran amuck of the Regents when he disapproved of W. W. Dear Elmer: I think it was a dirty trick, taking credit for my poem. Here is another good one. Dick Rover. * * * There, we told you we didn't write that trash. Another good one? Well, please cut this dribble shorter next time, Dick. A co-ed tripped across the floor, (1) I saw her heading toward the door. In gallant style I beat my way And got there first so I could say "Young Lady, I am after you, If you will please just pass on through." I followed up my pretty lead, (2) And asked her if she'd not con- cede To see a show with me sometime- Her wishes didn't jibe 'with mine. She told me flatly what she thought (3) Of people who were never taught That introductions of this kind Were not so very hard to find. I pondered over this a while- It didn't seem the co-ed style. Then all at once I saw the light, I failed to keep my pot from sight. . * * * Now, D i c k me lad, we are ashamed of you. This ought to. teach you the Truth About Co-Eds. May we point out several fallacies? (1) Good work on tripping her. (2) Are co-eds pretty? No. (3) Do they think? If so, what with? No to both questions. Leave 'em alone, Richard. Dear Elmer: Tsch, tsch, Elmer, a Harvard man would know what 'lieu' means, and I distinctly remem- ber using it in my billet-doux (pronounced Bill you mustn't) of Friday. And say, I haven't seen your library seal yet, but how about teaching it to balance a dic- tionary on its nose, and then I think people would stay off its toes. Poor thing. L. Dear 'Ell: We're sorry, but we were sending that paper down to Purdue, and thought they might not understand it. As for that atrocious pun of yours - fie on you. Shame, and double shame. Elmer. Which brings us up to the main subject. Among those caught by the rolls pherret yesterday stepping on the library seal were Prexy, Dean Bursley, Librarian Bishop, and DAN BAXTER. Among the reasons they gave were the following: Broken leg; saves time to cross the seal; to keep the rolls pherret busy. Here Comes DAN now, I'd better tear. Yours ELMER. * * * I should hope to kiss a pig, you'd better tear. Next time I catch that Lowbrow around my column, I'll take his Asst. Editorship away from him so fast it'll burn his hands. Hear me swear, my public, never again will you be cursed with one of his effusions. That's a promise of DAN BAXTER. Whose word is ever as good as a gilt-edged bond egad! TWO HOOTS FOR DAN AND ELMER They forgot to fill the column, so we've taken the liberty of open- ing Dan's mail. Well, it seems' Aunt Katie's teeth are troubling her again, and Cousin George-but you know how Cousin George is. Moreover, we found the following gem: Dear Dan: We see t h a t Michigan's monthly humor organ (even while writing this in fun we have to laugh), Gargoyle, has cast an aspersion on Rolls (the largest aspersion for an Octo- ber 22 since 1903, as a matter IT MUSIC AND DRAMA I- + i m - - - - - - -_ - - .A OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH A Review. Tuesday night in Orchestra Hall, Ossip Gabillowitsch, appearing un- der the auspices of the Twentieth Century Club, gave one of his very infrequent piano recitals. Mr. Ga- brilowitsch being the most dis- tinguished m u s i c a 1 personage within the available radius, it was an event of some significance. . The recital was very interesting for its illuminations of Mr. Ga- brilowitsch's qualities in his more; familiar role of conductor. The correspondence of musical inten- tions in both roles is really re- markable. It convinces one, if con- vincing was needed, of his integrity and self-awareness as an artist. For some reason or other, these inten- tions are very often only indicated in orchestral performances. They are magnificently realized at the keyboard. With the heightened s e n s e therein gained of Mr. Gabrilowitsch's attitudes toward music, one can be a more intelli- gent listener at his orchestral per- formances. Certain qualities persisted Tues- day night through Bach's Chroma- tic Fantasy and Fugue, Beethoven's C Minor Sonato Opus 10, Schu- mann Fantasy Opus 17, some fami- liar Chopin-an excellent program suggesting a lecture recital on the history of pianistic techniques. Throughout there was sanity and nobility of manner. Gabrilowitsch is anything but a hirsute thunderer, impressing by overwhelming. He is rather too sane for that. He achieves results by fine symmetry rather than by tumult and impet- uosity. He is composed, contriving: an intellectual. Yet he is a very poetic pianist. He makes considerable use of ru- bato and has a consistent, singing tone. But the music never gets out of hand because of his fine struc- tural foresight. One note goes to the other, with a clarity of move- ment that means control. Thus he is a pianist who realizes all the impulses which classic and roman- tic music suggest without abandon- ing himself to them. This classic continuance makes his most ques- tionable phrasing seem convincing. The outstanding interpretation Tuesday night was that of the Bach Chromatic Fantasy. is ap proach to this massive harmonic structure was deliberately contriv- ing. He refused the rapid tempo which makes it a virtuoso's piece, vivid and sensational. (Dalies Frantz has played it here this way). His interest lay in clarifying that intricate, text. His approach was entirely intellectual and one's ex- perience was largely of Bach the architect. But surprisingly there were many moments of lyricism at this retarded pace. Only a mature pianist could play this music so firmly and calm' y. Similarly, awareness of structure and good taste made his Chopin virile, without preventing him from realizing the variety of impulses there, with a mastery of tone color and nuances of phrasing. This basic sanity and nobility of manner, which makes Gabrilo- witsch an authoritative, incorrupt- ible musician, undoubtedly explains his avoidance of contemporary music. He perhaps feels that the hyper-emotionalism and distorted structure so frequent in contem- porary music are negations of his fundamental gifts of temperament and technique. Therefore, he sin- cerely avoids modern music. This conservatism-while still a limita- tion, I think-is understandable in the light of the perfection he at- tains by it at the keyboard. W. J. G. OLYMPIA A Pre-view. With that facility in the theatre which has made him one of the most wily and successful of- con- temporary craftsmen - dramatists, Molnar in "Olympia" has made a familiar romantic theme the basis for ingenious situations. The regal family is dreading a a scandal. It seems that when a dashing captain in the Imperial Hungarian Hussars too convinc- ingly touches the imperial blood pressure of Olympia the princess, she is forced to haughtily dismiss hin with that dreadful epithet "peasant." The captain's humble blood boils. He plans revenge. 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