PAGE FOUR THE MICT-JIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY J, 1931 PAGE FOUR.TH.MI..IGAN.DALY.FRIDAY,.JNUARY.9, 193 ....... Published every morning except Monday during 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- patches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published 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. Behyner Music. Drama, Books.........Wmn. I. Gorman Assistant City Editor....... Harold 0. Warren Assistant News Editor......Charles R. Sprowl Telegraph Editor...........eorge A. Staute: Copy EditorH..................Win. F. Pype NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger Carl S. Forsythe David M. Nichol John D. Reindel Richard L. Tobin Harold O. Warren SPORTS AsSISTANTS Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy Robert 'rownsci REPORTERS 3E. Bush Wilbur J. Meyers homas M. Cooley Brainard W . sies Morton Frank Robert.L. Pierce Saul Friedberg Richard Racine Frank B. Gilbreth Theodore T. Rose Tack Goldsmith Jerry E. Rosenthal Roland Goodman Chares A. Sanford Morton Helper Kiarl Seiflert Edgar Hornik Robert F. Shaw Bryan Jones Edwin M. Smith Denton C. Kunze George A. Stauter Powers Moulton John W. Thomas John S. Townsend Eileen Blunt Mary McCall Elsie Feldman Margaret O'Brien 'sRuth Gallmeyer E'leanor RKairdon Enily G. Grimes Anne Margaret Tobin jean Levy Margaret Thompson Dorotny agee Claire Trussell i- BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 T. HOLLISTER MABLEY, Business Manager KAsPER H. HALVER"ON, Assistant Manager DEPARTMENT MANAGERS Advertising ...... ....... Charles T. Kline 'Advertising..........homas M. Davis Advertising ............William W. Waroys Service ..... .............orris J. Johnson Publication...... .Robert W. Williamson Circulation .............Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts ...............homas S. Muir Business Secretary............Mary J. Kenan Assistants Harry R. Beglev Erle Kightlinger Vernon Bishop Don WV. Lyon William Brown William Morgan Robert Callahan Richard Stratemeier William W. Davis Keith Tyler Richard H. Hiller Noel ). Turner Miles Hoisington Byron C. Vedder Ann W. Verner Sylvia Miller Mariami Atran Helen Olsen Helen Bailey Mildred Postal Tosephine Convisser Marjorie Rough Maxine Fishgrund Mlary E. Watts Dorothy LeMire Johanna Wiese Dorothy Laylin FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1931 Night Editor - HAROLD WARRED4 POSITION SANS BRAINS. The Student council, at its last meeting, made its perennial post- convention decision to reorganize. Once each year, on hearing the highly-colored report of its repre- sentative to the national student congress, the council begins to "feel its oats." It wants to be powerful, tell the administration how to do things regarding the students and have the final say in everything af- fecting the campus. It is all very nice to be ambitious, but it seems a little ridiculous for a group which does things as sel- dom as the council does to talk about reorganization. Except for the, routine business of staging such recognition it must demon-' strate a willingness and initiative to consider problems more pro- foundly and effectively. What as- surance can it give the University that it can properly handle stu- dent-administration controversies, when it can not even solve problems between contending student forces? Reform begins at home, and when the council considers reorganization it might better deal first with its own internal operation. When it can do things in an efficient man- ner, when it can gain the respect of the great majority of students, and when it learns to know what it is talking about when it passes res- olutions, it will be able, at least in effect, to legislate for the students. It is its limitations, not in legal position, but in capability, that keeps the council from being pow- erful. Campus Opinion (ontribtors a a akel to lbe brief, confmiing themsehes to less that. 300 words if possible. Ationymus com- Ololi rat iii s ill be dsrgarde. The ramoos of coinumitiiieis will, however, e egallol as cifidential, upon re- quest . eitrs plmbisled should riot he conl;:rucd as e -pressing the eitorial opine n.11of Tire Daily. To the Editor: TWO YEARS OF HOOVER: A BLIGHTED RETROSPECT Having been led to question the omipotence of the "great engineer" by the astute heads of the Demo- cratic publicity bureau, citizens of the United States are beginning to wonder whether or not President, Hoover has a right to point with pride to any accomplishments in legislation or administration during the past year and a half he has been in office, and whether it would be a wise step to re-elect him to the office again in 1932. Hoover has had trouble from the very beginning of his term of office. His cabinet appointments were ac- cepted without much ado, but from that time on, the senate launched a veritable flood of objections to almost any nomination he made. One supreme court justice nomina- tion was voted down after an at- tempt had been made to accomplish the same with the nomination of the chief justice' The trouble with the senate has been one of Hoover's greatest ob- stacles. He is obviously not a pol- tician, or shrewd diplomatist when it comes to handling a political body, and he has demonstrated his inability to cope with the situation for quite some time. Recommenda- tions to Congress have, with a few exceptions, either been ignored, or' voted down. At present he is faced by a distinctly hostile senate, with the possibility that if he is re- elected in 1932 he will have to deal with a Congress which will be dom- inated by a Democratic majority. 'Had Hoover appealed to the people on several issues instead of the Congress, popular sentiment might have forced the members to toe the mark. President Wilson accomp- fished wonders by this method, stumping the entire country to pre- vent the re-election of a few mem- hers of Congress who opposed his views. If they knew that their con- stituents were favorable to Hoover measures, they would soon change their voting habits. But the Presi- Ml!SIC AND DRA ' BERNARDINO MOLINARI Bernardino Molinari, the distin- guished Italian conductor who will make his Ann Arbor debut as guest conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra Monday night in Hill Au- ditorium, has had an interesting, versatile career. He had a thorough musical training at the Licco Mus- icale of Santa Cecilia in Rome. His first important opportunity came in 1909 when he was asked to prepare for the Augusteo a series of concerts in the music of Richard Strauss, at that time the musical revolutionary shocking the world. The success of this young conduc- tor with that difficult assignment of contemporary music assured him a regular position at the Augusteo, and he has risen from regular con- ductor to general artistic director of the Augusteo: the most distin- guished musical office in Rome. In addition to his interest in con- temporary music which he has vig- orously maintained, Mr. Molinari is particularly noted for his interes in the great choral works, insist- ing as he does in Rome on annual performances of the Missa Solem- nis of Beethoven, the B Minor Mass of Bach, and the Requiem of Ber- lioz. He also conducted the second performance of Honegger's King David. Molinari, when his work at the Augusteo pemits, has appeared all over the world as guest conductor and is perhaps more familiar tc more audiences through his travels than any other living conductor. He has, of course, conducted all over in Italy. He conducts an an- nual symphonic series at Prague and Vienna, conducts opera occa- sionally at the State Opera in Ber- lin, is well known in London and Liverpool. His first visit to America was ir 1928 when he appeared with the New York Philharmonic, the St. Louis Symphony, and the Sa Francisco Symphony. Last sum- mer he conducted the full series at the Hollywood Bowl. He is in this country this year primarily to fill a five weeks en- gagement with the Philharmonic while Mr. Toscannini is abroad. His appearances in Detroit and at Ann Arbor are the only other engage- ments he has accepted. The program he has built for Monday night follows: Fingal's Cave ........ Mendelssohn Fourth Symphony ........ Brahms Ancient Dances First Suite ........ .........Respighi Fountains of Rome.......Respighi Two excerpts from the Opera "Giuliettae Romeo" . .Zandonal PLAY PRODUCTION Friday and Saturday night o0 next week Play Production will pre- sent the first of a series of strictly laboratory productions primarily intended to allow an outlet in act- ual theatre practice for the activ- ity of those students enrolled in the courses who do not become signifi- cantly connected with the major productions during the year. The program next week will in- elude three one-act plays and will be student directed, student acted., a n d student designed. Tickets, which are free, will be available at the office in Play Production Thea- tre the beginning of next week. The plays are "Cinderella Mar- ried" which will be directed by Frances Young, Grad; the "Old Lady Shows Her Medals" by James Barries to be directed by Margaret Morin, '31; and "Poky" by Philip 'Moeller to be directed by Charles Monroe, '31. "Poky" is one of Moel- ler's Five Unhistorical Plays which have become laboratory favorites in Little Theatres. It concerns the af- fairs of John Smith and the In- dian Maiden. I About Books s ROMAN HOLIDAY: by Upton Sin- cair: Published by Farrar and Rinehart: New York, 1931: Price: 82.50: Re view Copy Courtesy of Wahr's Book Store.! Upton Sinclair's political and so- cial views have finally riven from him a scnmewhat considerable skill as a novelist and man of letters. In Roman Holiday he is so obviously and completely teaching a lesson I That he has quite forgotten to write a novel. At least Roman Holiday is no novel in this bourgeoisie coun- try. And whatever one's economic convictions, capitalist standards of iterature still hold.j It is too bad, for though an ap- parent propagenda has long been an excuse even if there were no other to dismias a work as value- ess, Upton Sinclair, in Oil and loston and other of his works, has roved himself a capable and read able novelist. His public has beeĀ± arge and though it may have ained Sinclair and impressed him 3omewhat with the futility of life, ingularrly more interested in the ?ovel than in the politics. His own zerce convictions lent his work a )ower which made them good. Roman Hoiday on the other hand is bad. It is the usual attempt to impress a point through a mar- shalling together of distant :and widely spread facts. It is bad logic and bad sensationalism. Luke Fa- ber, a man who embodies a singular ,ollection of traits, is the hero and protagonist. After a description of what he stands for and of the evils facing this country of ours, Faber becomes engaged in an attempt on bhe part of his American legion- naire friends to take the law in Their own hands in respect to those 2ommunistic "rats." He "t a k e s -America seriously." He "thinks that we should have kept our country for the sort of people who could run it, and not permitted ourselves , be overrun by ailures and out- 'asts from a hundred lesser tribes. Since we have failed to take that precaution, we might at least teach the newcomers sound morals and decent manners, and not permit Chem to demoralize us in the name of liberty." In the attempt to run some communists out of town, a rnan is killed and incidentally Faber mneets and is infatuated with a girl leader of the group. The next day, :uring an automobile race, he is njured and goes into a coma for Lhroe weeks during which time hings are happening in the world around him. And although he is suffering from a fracture at the base of the skull and is thoroughly anconscious, they go on for him tco. For immediately upon "passing out" Faber finds himself in Rome after the war with Carthage which is supposed to correspond with the present post-war period. All his f r i e n d s and acquaintances are there also, including a goodly num- =:r of communists, who come from the conquered Greece and from the east and Phoenecia and various other points. Among these people Faber discovers his loved one, the girl communist Marcia Penny who in Rome is named Marcia Penna. It, is an unimportant point, but still significant of the state to which Sinclair has descended and at the same time extremely annoying to :ealiza that all the people whom Faber knew in America have con- veniently been christened with eas- nly Rom anized names. Thus Luke Faber becomes Lucius, Penny be- comes Penna while Marcia remains the same. Then in Rome we must read through the same rigmarole of marshalled facts to prove that unless something is done immedi- ately about this communistic situ- ation, there will be a civil war. However, as I was saying, every- thing that happens in America while Faber is unconscious has Wysteriously enough for a detective story, its counterpart in patrician I and plebian Rome. Faber finally womes out of the coma to find him- seIf in the twentieth century where he discovers that all the events of I his hallucination, have actually taken place. He finds to his great sorrow, that as was the case in Rome, Marcia is dead, having been killed in the labor troubles. The book ends with a half-hearted at- tempt to explain the peculiar hal- lucination, but it is not convincing. There seems to be an effort to show in this book that our labor movement here is just as hundred! pereenter as is our Ku Klux clan. on Ir. Phone 4251 530 South Forest Ave. Plenty Home Dressed Chickens 35c and 38c per lb. I 3 .4dvcrtise in ,'hc AMichigan SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Das SORY -and the Bond Business TO KNOW THE PAST is to understand the present iy. ,,,4_ Forest Ave. Market I 111 Advertising Is ,Econo mizing ;, ,# Empires ...civilizations...personages ...the underlying reasons for their rise and fall. . . these are but a part of the rich heritage of history. The panorama of human, political and economic activity, revealed by the records of the past, provides a better understanding of the world as it is today... and the course it may take tomorrow. There is much to be learned from the story of Rome ... the Venetian merchants . . . the industrial revolu- tion . . . the Rothschilds. . . and the financial aftermath of the World War. . Commerce, industry, investment and finance have their roots deeply im- bedded in the past. In your study of history, the invest- ment business may have suggested it- self as a possible career...then again, it may never have occurred to you. In either case, you will find it helpful in deciding upon your future work, to send for our booklet, The Bond Busi- ness-What It Requires-What It Olfers. It is an interesting exposition of the investment business.. . its functions, organization, opportunities and re- quirements. Any interested student may have a copy upon request. >I HALSEY, STUART & C O I N C O R P O R A T E D CHICAG o, 201 South La Salle Street * NEW YORK, 35 Wall Street AND OTHER PRINCIPAL. CITIES To increase your knowledge of sound investment and of the investment business, listen to the Old Counsellor every Wednesday evening on the I lalsey, Stuart & Co. radio program ... Over a Coast to Coast network of 38 stations associated with the National Broadcasting Company. B O N D S T 0 F I T T H E I N V E ST O R i f x. -r-. ~ ~10, t- ---_ Y z _ _ _II ;t : 'AIN I Iy R M class games, elections, etc., the dent has allowed them to get out council spends most of its time ,of hand. passing meaningless resolutions. In administration, the President And this year it has neglected the has appointed committee after com- resolutions. So when the council mittee to "investigate" and deter- decides to reorganize, one must mine facts to be used in legislation logically ask: what for? and administration. Such commit-, However, what the council means tees have worked and reported, yet by reorganization is raising its legal nothing notable has been accomp- position in relation to the univer- ihshed as a result of their efforts. sity administration. What t h e y The most important one of all, the want is the elimination of the veto Wickersham Prohibition Enforce- power of the Senate Committee on nent committee; has yet to report, Student Affairs over its legislation. I and is expected to do so within the This change, the council believes, week. What effect its report may. would permit it to act without in- have on Congress and the country terference on all matters pertain- at large will probably be offset by ing to the students. the fact that people believe the This may sound rather pleasant conmittee has been instructed to to the student mind, but when one make as favorable a report with re- considers, on the one hand, that the spect to the dry's cause as possible. Board of Regents and the President As a party leader, which every have something to say about the president is supposed to be, Hoover University, and, on the other hand, khas not distinguished himself. His that the council has never demon- first appointee, named only after strated any real or lasting ability to his insistence when other members settle purely student disputes, it is objected, was finaly forced to resign a story of a different color. to save the Republican ship of state. The usual practice of the council The resignation of the next ap- in dealing with the student prob- pointee was demanded because of lems is to make a half-cocked reso- certain statements he had made, lution demanding this, that or the and now a third member, who ap- other thing, without any thought of pears to be a head of the party feasibility. It seldom investigates without title, has involved himself before acting and as a consequence in a battle with certain groups for its proposals are poorly conceived. a proceeding which any astute poli- R0A1)AY News AL is . i. EASTERN NEWS Dalies Frantz, Ann Arbor pianist. and former student of Guy Maier's of the local School of Music, has been appearing in a series of reci- tals throughout the East recently. He acted as an accompanist in sev- eral song recitals during the Christ- mas season. Notices in thn Tip Even the students have but little tician could have told him would al boned respect for the council. At the last do nothing but harm to his party. his ee assitne nus- all-campu election about an eighth;Prasth rIlehsbe his excellent assistance-an unus- alaus eeto bu negt Perhaps the trouble has been I ual thing in reviews of song-redi- of the students cared enough about that, not being a politician, Hoover tals. the council to vote. has asked and taken for granted Robert Henderson, director of the With all its self-imposed limita- too much of the advice which his , R r Hrh N~v --- en rov-u a v all '*7