PAGE POUR -r" f: IAA Tr 141 r. A N n A7TT"V _____________________________L' Lvl V 1"£I 1% I.N 111tH 1 L..X SUNDAN Y, NOVEMBER 16, 1930 Published every morning except Monday Luring" the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Couference 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 thie paper" and the local news published herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Mfichigan, 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 aard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214" EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY City Editor Frank E. Cooper "News Editor............... .Gurney Williams Editorial Director............ Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor................ Joseph A. Russell Women's Editor...........Mary L. Behymer Music, .Drama, Books........ Wm. J. Giorman Assistant City Editor ......Harold 0. Warren 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 0. Warren h Sports Assistants Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy. Robert Townsend Reporters .. I action and course of events at the Royal Gallery are further compli- cated by the presence cf M. A. Jinnah, leader of the Indian Mos- lems, and other organizers of the boycott of the Simon commission, which presences jeopardize Bri-I tain's chances or making the re- port of that body a bulwark in policy. The crux of this meeting is the perennial question "When?". More insistently and confidently than ever before, all of India's repre- sentatives say it is now. But more perplexedly than ever the Eng lish are yet concerned with the conse- quences of leaving India too sud- denly or to too great an extent. While the course of accomplish- ment which may run through the meetings of this roundtable is as opaque as the depths of Charona, one fact may confidently be assert- ed: if this conference fails, the Indian delegates will return con- vinced that while Gandhi was not at the conference, his way to get what they want is the only way. In that event, sic transit pax with a vengeance. 0- IEditorial Comment THE PRINCETON FROSHI ANSWERS About Books oldest canipu,; publications, had, for' many years before the last, been known for a certain sterility o1 creative variety, and for an almost complete lack of interest in any of the nmany contiroversial points ii:. litees ure. Las t year, however, after a drastic editorial shapeup which included i)ersoflfll and policy, the Inlanid~r for the first time ap- proached a real repr=:sentation o1 the modern artistic horizon. ho the first time it left the field ol cream puff verse and nice stonie. which sveemed so to suit the man- aging fclw. And it is vrith extreme satisfac- iona that we are able to r pori tthat with the first issue of this new year, it sems that the past i: to be de initely left behind. Fol the N ovem b r Inlander firmly an rieuiieesi that last year's Renals ,'anco was n~ot temporary. Readin, it, one is impelledl to stand up ant: cheer' for the fact that there exist: a group with suffici ent faith in thf , xitenc e of :iegitimate literary po Lentialities on the campus to ner- 4"V -rr w 'V""" "Tr-r "" P'''"Y""P-"Y EMUSIC ADDRAMA TtiiS AFTERNOO)N: In Bli A tcriim at. 4:15,- a rcital oien to ithe pubic by tl"v'rccntly formed School of M~usicTro Prof. Wassily Besekersky, Prof. 11an-ns Piclk, and Mr. Joseph B~rinkimani. STUDENTS IN RECITAL Violin and piano students of the School of Music will join forces in the- second public student recital of the year at the School of Music Auditorium orn Maynard street. lTuesday evening, November 13,, at 1:15 o'clock. At this time a number Df advanced students will appear (n maiscellarneous numbers. The ;eneral public is invited to hear the followin g pt r.o.. a . Violin Duet: Navarra.............. Sarasate First Movem-ent Romine Hamilton, Gecorge Poinar. Piano: Variations in F mninor. . .. Haydn .Emily Phillips. Solnata, Opus £90......Beethoven First Movement Mildred Stanger. Iii ' ----- --- FORTA T of _- _ .. __._. _V -r- - ----rrrr- T L .~ w a a ,.i.A. .A -i . .,A A.,A.A.,-a . - w d.... A AT RICES MUCH BELOW CURRENT MARKET QUOTATIONS Mr. S. G. Gulian purchased from a foreign,~ corporation, recently bankrupt, an important collection of high-grade Persian rugs at greatly reduced prices, which makes it possible to offer the following values: Walter S. Baer, Jr Irving J. Blumberg Thomnas N!. (ooley George Fisk Morton Frank Saul Friedherg Frank B. Gilbreth Jack Goldsmith Roland Goodman James IT. Inglis Denton C. Kunze Powers Moulton Wilbur 1. Myers Lynne Adams Betty Clark Elsie Feldman Elizabeth Gribble ?mily G. Grimes Elsie M. Hofffmeye jean Levy Dorothy Magee Mary McCall r. Parker Terryberry Robert L. Pierce Wmin F. Pyper Shner M. Quraishi Jerry E. Rosenthal George Rubenstein C'harles A. Sanford Karl Seiffert Robert F. Shaw Edwin M. Smith George A. Stauter Alfred R. Tapert Tohn S. Townsend. Robert D. Townsend Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Jean Rosentbl Cecilia Shriver Frances Stewart er Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Claire Trussell Barbara Wright BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER T. HOLLISTER MABLEY Assistant Manager K~ASPER H. HALVERSON Department Managers Akdvertising....... ..Charles T. Klir Advertisii z............ .Thomas M. Dav Advertising ............ William W. Warbo) Service........ ..Norris J. Johnse Publication.........:...Robert W. Williamsc Circulation........ ...... Marvin S. Kobacli Accounts............Thomas S. Mu Business Secretary ............Mary 3. Xena Assistants Larry R. Beglev IDon W. Lyon Vernon Bishori William Morgan William Brown II. Fred Schaefer Robert Callahan Richard Stratemeier %Yilliarn W. D~avis Noel D. Turner Richard I1. Hiller Byron C. Vedder Erle Kightlinger Marian iAtran Helen Bailey Josetphine Convisser Dorothy Laylin Sylia Miller Helen Olsen Mildred Postal Marjorie Rough Ann W. Verner Mary E. Watts J ohanna Wiese SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1930 Night Editor--RICHARD L. TOBIJ SHALL THE TWAIN MEET? While the 1930 Imperial Confer ence remains impaled on severa economic pickets, the bulk of Bri. tain's governmental and diploma tic energy is now being levelled a the India roundtable conferenc( which opened last Wednesday. Bu, on the result of these meeting, hang events of much more acute- ness and far-reaching implication. than any yet conjured by lasi month's Imperial meetings. For the first 1ime in the history of the interchange of delegation, and commissions between India and Britain the representatives o: the various political groups and of all the different religions of Brit- ish India, princes of independent Indian States and representative of all three British political par- ties are assembled to deal with what has been euphemistically known as a riddle, but which more correctly seems an enigma, beg- ging any solution. This conference is equipped, therefore, with a per- sonnel representing the cross-sec- tion of factors and interests atten- dant upon the problem of India's status within the empire. This time, despite the customary declarations of good-will, the In- dian delegates, even at the open- ing session, permitted a note of challenge and well-prepared deter- mination to temper their felicita- tions. Since 1919, Great Britain has been "saying to India, 'You shall have what you ask.' India's reply at this conference is, 'We want it now.' " India's aspiration of nationalism was the theme of all the speeches by Indians. Their challenge was made even more ominous by the statement of Srrin- ivasa Sastri, t~he Hindu statesman, when he said, in reference to the declaration made last year by Lord' Irwin, the Viceroy, and the Labor government that Great Britain rec- ognized the natural goal of India's constitutional deveiopment as do- minion status, "Our allotted task is to interpret these statements liberally and to translate them courageously into positive meas- (From the Daily Iliini) steniit yiyo)!w them anilfc gate t1item tLogether. Nven if the Inlande There is but little significance were bad, whech it is not, it sti back of the news dispatch fromn would be a star ting; Off poit fo Princeton university which gives some citelligmt artistic contr statistics showing that in general veroy. It has things 'in 1He Americrain theatre IS the talent and the success of t :wo young; Oowomien Ruth Dra per anid Cornelia Otis Skinner. These two hiave proven with a vengeanic th ,i, people ha-re the samec love for pure drama if it is not cluttere-d with1 Cllap-trap, cheap scenery, poor act,- ing. Miss Skinner, who comes t;o the Mendelssohn rPhea ti c Frid ay night, was formerly known as the~ daughter of Otis Skinner; one thinks of her now more o~ten as the very successful rival of Ruuthb Draper in theri at xactive and difliz- - ---------- - ------------- j,'II ,wA _. _. _.... _ __ Chora1 Union 0ocet DON CHOU 36 "Horsemen of the LILAHAN 5 ft. by 3 ft. 6 in. Choice $42.00 -ai SARK fft. 6 in. by 4 ft. 6 in. Choice $115.00 Steppes." All former officers of the Imperial Russian army, now expatriates, "mien without a country" who are travelling on "Nan- sen Passports," in a program of Russian folk songs, church music and, soldier SERGE JAROFF songs. Th .rsday, Nov. 20, 8:15 P. M. Tickets $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 i ONWawwnw4b FT N 1 !6 I iii; I I r! . Ijj )eroit Symphony Orchestra Ga brilowitsch, Conductor jlI I' I Ii;' Nonday, INov. 24 tL.8:15 P. MA*. - cult dramnatic caImeo. j one or IHV eric Miss Skinnecr is onel of the - -I iala~t"ud is , actresses in America.IT ,rptt,.r ia--sts n e pertics arc nothing to speak O, a table and a chair generally. Alo .t, renowned conduc1 without the Mechanics of the thea-- tre, Mtiss Skinner reduces all the K1 musical imm~orta theatre of the world to the mea- pin vruooa sure of herself. Alexander Woolcat t pam itoo payed her a, profound, though witty tribute by calling hecr "'a ml - i crocosni," -Icr clfara cter- lketcl'-'s I I raenge front "On the Beach at BR-i - I 2 bados'' I ''Sn owbount)d in Iowa,' Iy s mnost valuable mus- ir the baton of a world tor who has achieved ality in two fields- A orchestra conductor. $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 dw n nn dsn ^A dh.5 0% n0% 1