PAGE FOURL T HE MICIHIGAN DAILY TUiSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1930 .. . ....... . ...... ... 04r ir~ign 7 3atli Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Ccntr-ol of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference 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 this paper and the localtnewsepublished herein. Entered at the postoffice 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, Maynard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY FRANK E. COOPER, City Editor News Editor ............... Gurney Williams Editorial Director..........Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor ..............Joseph A. Russell Women's Editor ...........Mary L. Behymer Music, Drama, Books........Win. J. Gorman Assistant City Editor.......arolde . Warren Assistant News Editor...Charles R. Sprowl Telegraph Editor ...........GeorgeA. Stautei Copy Editor..................Tm.EF. Pype NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger Carl S. Forsythe David M. Nichol John D. Reindel Richard L. Torin Harold 0. Warren SPoRTs AsStSTANTS ,Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy Robert Townsend REPORTERS 1. E. BushI Shornas M. Cooley Morton Frank Saul Friedberg Frank i. Gilbreth Jack Goldsmith Roland,oodinan Morton Helper Edgar Hornik Bryan Jones Denton C. Kunze Powers Moulton Eileen Blunt Elsie Feldman Ruth Gallmeyer Emily G. Grimes Elsie M. Hoffineyer Jean Levy Dorotny Magee Wilbur J. Meyers Robert L. Pierce Richard Racine Jerry E. Rosenthal Charles A. Sanford Karl Seiffert Robert F. Shaw Edwin M. Smith eorge A. Stauter john XW. Thomas John S. Townsend Mary McCall Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Ciaire Trussell Barbara Wright American secondary schools pro- duce. It should be unnecessary to stt that by making education itst- ing we do not mean that t. snould amuse or mollycoddle the student with theatrical or extremely :sc carine gestures. Whtat we do , is first that the teacher should embody for the student the best qualities that a love for U he suoja1 and its humanistic possiiiaie_ cani generate; and second, that th pro-I fessor willingly inspire the pupil toJ an interest as great as his own and elicit from the latter a well-founded basis for work and similar devotion. Further, the light of culture need1 not be hid modestly under a bushelE of research and the cloistered life.- The responsibility for this task lies obviously with the teacher; upon him alone depends the illum- ination of what interest culture ! may have for the undergraduate, Pedagogy may well risk coloring its commodity with the hue of a bril-! liant teacher's personality when by that means it may create an earn- est demand for not only "sweetness and light" but downright solid cul- ture and knowledge. INTERFRATERNITY MEETINGS Following the holidays the Inter- fraternity council plans to hold anj inter-house conference on the cam- pus at which all men's organiza- tions will be asked to take part. Group meetings are to be conducted at which representativess of the organizations will meet and discuss problems of mutual interest. For some time Michigan and the coun- cil has been needing such contact among the interfraternity council representatives. It will get them acquainted with each others views, and will mould them into a group more aware of problems of vital importance. If the interfraternity conferencej is to be a success obviously the rep-I resentatives of every fraternity must give this full support. Too m a n y times the Intcrfraternity council has failed to accomplish what it has set out to do merely because the representatives have shown little or no interest. A series of group sessions at which problems now facing the fraternities are con- sidered should, for the first time in several years, get the council. organized so that it will be able to act as an intelligent unit and con- sider the problems that are sure to confront it in the next few years. ~~ , With no attempt at levity what- ever I wish to apologize for the column which appeared without my authority in Sunday's paper. To my mind it contained much that was both uncalled for and i poor taste. I have not as yet, it is true, re- ceived any complaints, but I feel that it is only fitting to state that such things are not in accordance with any policy the column may C AND DR VICTOG'S JANUY RAVEL: Quartt F: the Krettly Quartet: Muw erpiece Series Album No. This early work (1902 year old composer is qu. tial to understanding oft ious aristocrat, so cons craftsman as to conten with sterile, if brilliant tion of his talent, that w Ravel today. - - ~MA played byA ;ieal Mast- ) of a 27 te sen-dHALLER'S ummate a State Street Jewelers t himself exploita- 4r know as y 1 k d 1 "n . F? n . a r i FAQ y -' tt a RJ On Your Trip Home [n' iforget to take A M IC HI GA N M E M ORY BOOK Filled with delicious BE rS". ROSS CANDIES *1 The Betsy Ross Shop 13-15 Nickels Arcade E 'i j' , - a ...a.. x claim as its own. This quartet, already considered cla classic in France, is dedicated to ut let us get on to happier "mon chere maitre Gabriel Faure" ma tiers. The Pherret reports and reveals the thorough training having found another sport Ravel got from Faure in classical which, he claims, surpasses all principles-a training that has its 1r'decessors. It consists of been basic in his most "modern" prowling about the Newberry works. Ravel, whom we know more Aud--a place of ill fame on as an amazing colorist (La Valse, campus-and openi.g all the Daphnis and Chloe, Bolero etc.) deors therehi. He says that while still a youth appears to have there are several perfectly stolidly met the severe discipline amazing nooks and crannies to demanded of the composer for four be found that would intrigue strings. His quartet represents no the minds of the most incur- shrinking from the - formal and ious. stylistic problems peculiar to chan- ber music; his temperament in- Speaking of which, I am told that deed proves congenial to them. the Mimes Review also has lent Throughout is revealed an unfail- its support to the campaign for ing apprehension of form: as wit- ameliorating the conditions ex- ness his epigramattic terse solution tant across from A. H. Their poetic of the strucutral problems of the statement that it is built of old sonat form in the first movement string and completely equipped and his lucid handling of the dang- with classrooms and mice and iserous technique of cyclic thema- soon to be replaced by a bomb ctiuelten of.cyic the. - sounded sweeter in my ears than3puoerem scncis anything I have heard in many a movement material). In 1902, Rav 'ong year. . a el was formally eminent. 711 A New Sport7 iy Make your owr ~ r dsto recods t lin e :&~ : : iiin! Vicrol ti~f tiC2 . ^., __-'' 4 I, Ills BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 T. 11OLLISTER MABLEY, Business Manager KASPER IT. IALVERSON, Assistant Manager DEZ'ARTM ET MANAGERS Advertising................Charles T. Klint AdvertisingT................homas M. Davis Advertising ............ Willianm W. Warboys Publication............Robert W. Wi liamson Circulation .............. Marvin S. Kobacker Accouns.............. mas S. Muir Business Secretary.... ....... Mary J. Kenan Assistants larry R. Beglev Erie Kightlinger Vernon Bishop Don W. Lyon William Brown William Morgan Robert Callahan R ichardlStratcneier William W. Davis Keith Tyler Richard IT. Hiller Noel D. Turner Miles Hoisington Byron C. Vedder Ann W. Verner Sylvia Miller Marian Atran Helen Olsen Helen Bailey Mlildred Postal Josephine Convisser Marjorie Rough Maxinie Fisgrund Mary E. Watts Dorothy LcMire Johanna Wiese Dorothy Laylin TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1930 Night Editor-RICHARD L. TOBINi MAKE EDUCATIGN INTERESTING From time to time this fall The Daily has somewhat sporadically urged that the University commit itself rather more earnestly to a policy of greater emphasis upon teaching as opposed to research and extramural activities. This view has been voiced dogmatically perhaps, but to our mind the edu- cational picture has been so un- balanced and toneless as would condone such an attitude. As we see it, the present relations' of professor to student embody a lamentable paradox. It must be quite frankly admitted that from the professor's standpoint the aver- age run of undergraduates are neither exceptionally intelligent, overly well-prepared for college work, nor unusually interested in their academic pursuits. This condi- tion may be due on the one hand to the modern democratic view toward a college education for everyone, and on the other to such motives in coming to the university as its social life or possibilities, family pressure and an immature desire for cultural background. The result of this offering, as the professor often contends, is a student body unworthy or unequipped to "carry on" with higher learning. From the undergraduate's view, the professor is often reluctant to spend much time teaching, in work- ing with the student to solve his problems and in making his courses something more than a classroom routine to be got through as quickly as possible and with as little ex-I And just by the way, I see that certain of oar local thea- ters are running strong coMrpe- tition with the Newberry Aud. in the line of interior decora- tions. The boxes in one of them that I can think of right now ! are gayly festooned with de- cayed and dilapidated dingbats that take on a very close re- semblance to last year's Christ- moa, tree after it has stood out by the gara.,-in the back yard next to that od Ford you bought in your sopihomnore year in High school. Somehow er ether the zeal tkn coti'jOnn t'e t1S cliec- tion c em:L O al g aOff of late. Can it be tbat lle fact of my relegated to the three- times-a-week class can have so discouraged my little playfel- lows? Shame slme for desert- lug me thus in mine hour of Sdisgrace and tirbuLince or tur- pI&ude or whatever! Dear Dan: It's about time Rolls alfected this Campus Opinion Contributors ate asked to be brie, confining themsehes tio less than 300 words if possi ile. Aiionymus em- munications will ice disr icrdc.I Tile names of communicants will, however, be regarded as conidential, upon re- quest. Letters pubHlished should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinon of The Daily. ' j 9ii !{{ R i t. -.----- Tam pus in a literary way. So we're To the Editor:I submitting this: One. It is part of the business o a gargoyle to make funny faces and CHRISTMAS SPINITUAL it is quite within the rights of the A Christmas Spiritual. j Gargoyle to travesty anything that I got a shoe is ridiculous. The tinselled tras, j You g;ot a shoe now cluttering the post offices of Ie, sie, it got a shce this and other nations by the ton iWe got shoes is ridiculous. In calling attention to You got shoes that fact the Gargoyle does a public They get shoes service.. MA LAWD! Those who were offended by the m mmn (denotes recent cover should be reminded l reverence). that the story of "Three Kings of Orient Are" is hoary but not sac- By substituting different nouns, red. The story is poetic and doubt- you can prolong this indefinitely.; less has its patent and latent lEs- I'That is, if you want to make your-I sons for us all but if it is essential self seem very, very silly, indeed, to salvation to believe that a star you can. That for you Mr. Baxter! detached itself from the firmament Gdfrey. and went with three noble travel- Ad Tba*t for you too, you nasty lers and stood still over a humble td Ttfy ,yip!usD. B. Judaean village then I fear that' e B some of us must be damned per- st of petual.ecz. I2r ess that Two (and on the other hand). maes the last article but one Let me remind "Alumnus," whose above utterly null and void if Llyou care to go back and look. letter shows him to be among those ere HE Poi Jae sthat note about I irritated, that the Gargoyle has r-re cently adopted as its symbol a r utaks ar fThatealI hydrant. It is a matter of common ; . ' ' a'll take care of that all experience that if you open a hyd- Ight now. Good old Joe; you rant you get at once a flood tht can always ptyour trust ii, is dark brown and dirty. But if you. him-if you don't happen to wait a while it will be cleaner. Vwant it at the time. And who ihiltwlly yanr. does want a trust? They aren't Hopefully yours,e . Emotionally, tne quartet in char- acteristic: that is characteristically Gallic: being discreet, reticent, anct on the whole limited in vitality: though l u c i d and interesting throughout. His expression is fine- ly chiselled from the suave melodi- -:, o ~o hefrt move) ent I through the piquant vivacity of the Scherzo definitely imitative of the Debussy Scherzo) to the spirit Fin- ale. The Krettly Quartet, a new or- t-aization to Victor, plays it with line spirit. Ravel's occasional cel- oristic novelties are very deftly rendered but not exaggerated and 1 properly subordinated. In a lm id reticent reading Ravels quartet ap- pears to be, with his Trio and per-I haps the Daphis and Chloe Suite, part of his major work. SCHUMANN: Symphony Ne. 1 in BI Flat major: played by Frederick Stock and the Chicago Symphny Orchestra. Stock, by insistent performances and by re-orchestration of the Fourth Symphony. has been re- sponsible for a new interest in Schumann's neglected symphonies. Though essentially a miniaturist, this first symphony of Schumann's contains enough well-integrated romantic charm to permanently delight. Written in his greatest period of happiness (the first year c hi;s marriage) and actually planned as a "Spring symphony" it is a work of irreflective joy, eager, fluent, for Schumann fairly felicitous in or- chestration, containing ene of the most tender, melodious slow move- ments in symphonic literature. Stock, as may be expected, plays the symphony very splendidly, very joyously; perhaps, with the excep- tion of the Bach B minor Suite, h- best playing for Victor. GLUCK: Airs de Ballet: played by I Walter Damrosch and the National Symphony Orchestra: on Records -323-e322. Walter Damrosch with a smil orchestra makes two fine records of some of the purest, most exquis- ite, perfect airs ever written: ex- tracted, reorchestrated, and ar- ranged from the operas of Gluck by Gervaert, the Belgian composer. The selections include: Air and Slave's Dance from Iphigenia in Aulis, Tambourin from the same Gavotte from Armide, Chaconne from Iphigenia. On the fourth side is an orchestration by Leopold Damrosch of the Gavotte in D from Bach's Sixth Sonata for violoncello. Damrosch plays all this music del- cately, tenderly, clearly and the- are two of the happiest, most "nec- essary" records Victor has issued in a long time. DEBUSSY: Preludes, The Wind on the Plain and Minstrels: played by Ignace Paderewski. Paderewski very brilliantly re- cords these two somewhat unfam- iliar pieces from Debussy's firsi book of Preludes-pieces he has KE14E1 (JGET ADIO Do not fail to see and hear this exceptional smA { radio uiae for discriminating buyers. all the 'inprovements. Screen grid tsse ac kpeaer and tone control. Has c University MtiscHouse Devotd to l Music William Wade Hishaw Cor. Maynard & William Phone 7515 I suv~,d Gar th I t iw rrrusi, 'Now I I li XXLTwo Jens The besti n nir I1,c fncst in r,.do 4 .i- - - net ever built . . . . c.nt Aing 3 :at Victor instcumenis in one. pricc within your rea ci. Als o V-.ctor Rad"n separately. '1 .... 3L'7F i'.: c.. L ,...S PS4A At a Never before a MusRcal Lnstrtinent like this. The most beautiful cabi- I i' ' I I I I { , i tenuation on his part as may be. I To the Editor: The "human equation" between If the Gargoylo were. professor and pupil is minimized by as he says, "a cesspool of literature large courses, desultory lectures, and art," "Alumnus" hoCs n~ and trivial "rehashing" in quizz one of the toads when hie famiiiarl' sections. refers to commercial ornography. From the foregoing analysis, the It takes a sympathetic writ as d u above cited paradox is evident: the reader to establish an idea. 13: professor thinks the average run of much for "the degenerate mind undergraduate is unworthy of much that ..... edit it." attention; the student, on the other The Gargoyle is obviously pro- hand, is left cold by instructor's duced for students and hlumsorist - lack of enthusiasm in teaching. of which "Alumnus" is neither. To our mind, the cause of this j None of our moral dilettantes Pat situation and the course for its essayed an absolute analysis of elimination lies in this fact: the famous Gargoyle cover, which is a greatest problem of education to- virtual admission that it i all th'> e] Tr is +- - - ~I- V n -..,; ;-.,. - - _,_ - _ -4 . These icy days are surely fine For everyone whose trousers si-fine F or they can gayly speed at will A-odwn the lovely State St. Hill Iniceed as many do, I trow (Pro- nounced troo) Indeed as many do. °i " I _C , = But woe to all unwary boys Who try the amie in corduroys For all in vain they take their spill Upon the lovely State St. Hill. s any others (o, Do you? As many others do? PICTURE I I, 'Ii