PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER J. 19, 30 TH.MIhGN AL _...DAY_, OCT .flER 5 . .1e, .. r i -_. - __ - - _ - .. _. __ __ _. .. _.._ _._. _- 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 thie 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, May- nard 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 Telegraph Editor..........Harold O. Warren Music and Drama.........William J. Gorman Assistant News Editor..Charles R. Sprowl 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 _STBaer, Jr. Wilbur J. Myers nants which fly above the gridiron or the cheer leaders in their yellow and blue garb. For such students, additional loan funds mean an education which would be imposs- ible were there not such commend- able alumni from Michigan. ORTHODOX OPTIMISM. President Hoover's remarks with regard to the country's economic condition, delivered before the American Bankers association, may be described as an appropriate piece of orthodox optimism. He made a very calm survey of the financial and business depression offering reasons for the fiscal low ebb which concur with those ad- vanced by professional economists and experienced business men. In dealing with some causes he prac- ticed a well-conceived self-re- straint, and it is also to be noted that Mr. Hoover made no definite prediction regarding the time or extent of the recovery to prosperity in which he firmly believes. This speech, ',given before the country's greatest bankers, was politically strategic and appropri- ately well-timed. When most of the known causes of the business slump are at least indirectly attributable to loss of confidence and general pessimism, the influence of the bankers in effecting a recovery to stabilized conditions becomes pro- found. President Hoover pointed out to them ways in which they could assist the people to attain a more optimistic mental attitude in the face of imminent hard times this coming winter. He showed how banks through co-operating with the Federal Reserve board and meeting every legitimate demand for credit could facilitate resump- tion of business on a large scale. While the country's economic experts are probing for the aca- demic causes of the present slump, the President's display of firm faith in the resources and recuperative powers of the United States cannot fail to do good in correcting undue pessimism about the future. Irving J. Blumberg Donald 0.Boudeman Charles M. Brown George 'P.sCallison George Fisk 7ernard W. Freund Morton Frank Saul Friedberg Frank B. Gilbreth Karl E. Goellner Jack Goldsmith Roland Goodman William H. Harris James H. Inglis Emil J.. Konopinski Dlenton C. Kunze Powers Moulton Lynne Adams Betty Clark Elsie Feldman Elizabeth Gribble Emily G. Grimes Elsie M. Hoffmeyer Jean ,Levy Dorothy Magee Mary McCall Robert L. Pierce Sher M. Quraishi C. Richard Racine Jerry E. Rosenthal G;eorge Rubenstein David Sachs Charles A.Sanford Barl Seiffert Robert F. Shaw Edwin M. Smith G;eorge A. Stauter Alfred R. Tapert John S. Townsend Robert D. Townsend Max H. Weinberg Joseph F. Zias Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Jean Rosenthal Cecilia Shriver Frances Stewart 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............ . Charles T. Kline Advertising ................Thomas M. Davis Advertising............ William W. WVarboys Services...............aNorris J. Johnson Publication ............ Robert W. Williamson Circulation..............Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts . .............Thomas S. Muir Business Secretary. .......Mary J. Jenan Assistants Thomas E. Hastings Byron V. Vedder Harry R. Begley Erle Kightlinger William Brown Richard Stratemeier Richard H. Hiller Abe Kirshenbaum Vernon Bishop Noel D. Turner William W. Davis Aubrey L. Swinton H. Fred Schaefer Wesley C. Geisler Joseph Gardner Alfred S. Remsen Q _n Ann Verner Dorthea Waterman Alice McCully Dorothy Bloomgarden Dorothy Laylin Josephine Convisser ernice Glaser Hortense Gooding Laura Codling Ethel Constas Anna Goldberg Virginia McComb Joan Wiese Mary Watts Marian Atran Sylvia Miller SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1930 Night Editor-RICHARD L. TOBIN DWINDLING LOAN FUNDS. Michigan, .at the present time, is confronted by one of the greatest problems in its history. Dean J. A; Bursley recently announced that the total available loan fund for needy students is approximately half of any previous year while the demand this fall is the greatest in history. Of the $240,000 which has been given the University by gen- erous alumni toward this noble end, $180,000 was in circulation on July 1 and doubtless there will be but little of the original'left when the present loans are totaled'and an- nounced. Following an announcement that the University was in distress in this worthy field, three alumni donated a total of $1,500 to be used for such purposes. One gift was for $1,000, another for $200 and a third for $300. Not only were these gifts unsolicited but they came within 48 hours of the printing of a mere story of facts concerning the loan situation. In the story absolutely no appeal was made to alumni, - no shirking of duty was evident, no resolve to withdraw from the task of attempting to fill more than double the requests for loans with but half the normal capital. It is seldom possible to comment editorially upon achievements of persons or institutions in words of praise without feeling a slight tremor that perhaps one is over- doing the greatness of the act or achievement in question. Such, however, is not the case with don- ors of thfee such useful gifts as came to the Dean's office this week. The old controversy as to which shall we tolerate - the outward show of power and splendor, or the quiet search for real knowledge -crops up with the receipt of such gifts. Persons may give, and rightly, large sums of money to finance great football stadia, fine show places, beautiful uniforms for one' event or another, and yet may miss the real basis of college life. It is with relief that such timns a the Editorial Comment o MR. HEARST IS KICKED OUT OF FRANCE (From the Daily Cardinal) Monsieur Tardieu, premier of France, could scarcely have known what a kick upwards he was giving to William Randolph Hearst and his newspapers when he recently ordered the 67-year-old millionaire journalist out of France. The Hearst organization, money-wise, is cash- ing in on what would have been insult and embarrassment to many another man, and Mr. Hearst finds himself the recipient of civic cere- monies and political ecomiums wel- coming him back home. "Expulsion of William Randolph Hearst from France is an act of official pettiness," the Chicago Her- ald and Examiner quotes Gov. Em-' merson as saying. "It is direct con- tradiction of the American ideals of freedom of the press and is not justified by the facts in the case. Under the circumstances, his ejec- tion is a reflection not on him, but on the government of France." James A. Reed, former senator from Missouri, waxes warm over the fact that Mr. Hearst "has done a fine thing to call the attention of the American people to the spine- less attitude of our government to- wards the rights of citizens abroad"; Mayor Curley of censor- ridden Boston censures France for its "sad departure from the chiv- alry which this nation (France) claims for itself" and from the "in- ternational principles of the Mar- quis de la Fayette;" Marcellus E. Foster, Texas publisher, swears that "he is not going back to France until her attitude toward America changes"; and Massachusetts' Sen. Walsh asserts that "an explanation is due from France; it is about time that we find out the value of the American passport." Behind all the clap-trap of cere- monials and the sophomorisms of politicians we can see the hand of the Hearst business office guiding every move to the clanging of the Hearst cash register. These martyr stories increase circulation; increas- ed circulation pays, and Mr. Hearst has never been found wanting in turning to cash register purposes propaganda, for a war with Spain, forged Mexican documents, et al. Indeed the inter-state functions for Czar William is just another edi- tion of the Ford-Edison national "Diamond Jubilee of Light" public- ity stunt. (Mr. Edison was incident- al; selling more electric products was the thing.) Monsieur Tardieu's act might not. have been expedient, but our state department ,knows tha t Tain i S E" ..,L Dont Rea Thisam* The fact is, fellows, I am not feeling my best after that game yesterday. Not that I would seem to criticise the team. Far from it. But I do think that there should be a law against cheer-leaders who exhort us to emit foul noises at times when the band is doing its best to sweeten the air with melo- dies such as "The Star Spangled Banner." * .. * The Band wasn't perfect either. They missed one of the swellestchances to run over the Referee I have ever seen. All they had to do was lengthen their stride a trifle and they had him; but the big sissies turned aside at the crucial moment, and a great oppor- tunity was thrown away. * * Not only that, but I saw a woman enter the front door of the Union the other day. Not content with stealing our swimming pool be- cause their frivolity prevented their having one of their own, they are stealing our prerogatives as well. I shouldn't be at all surprised to see our fair sisters parading the streets with masculine prerogatives adorning their hats. No sir, not one little bit surprised. I foresee that in a very short time indeed we shall be exceedingly short of prerogatives. And let me say right here that nothing looks any sillier than a man with a short preroga- tive. That is, hardly anything. * * a AMONGST THE CLASSIFIEDS. FOR SALE: Three evening gowns; also painted face scarf. That is a swell thought, that painted face scarf business. If all women with painted faces wore scarfs over them the world would be a much better place. And think of the savings in cleaner's bills! Say, another thing about yester- day's game. There is a large re- ward offered to the man, woman, or student (Professors ineligible) who can tell in not more than five hundred words just what the band was trying to represent out there during the intermission at the half. I noticed something else, but I guess I have given the band all it can stand, or I have given the Band stand all it can, or-let's let it go at thatfellows, I think you understand by now that all I meant was that the Stand can had all the band. * * * I note that "Noted German Chemist is to Lecture on Mon- day" according to a recent headline. This is another chance for the ever alert Rolls staff to aid its public. Through the efforts of the Pherret, we have dug up enough information about the subject noted above so that we are able to save you the time you would spend in a lecture hall listening to a lec- turer. The facts, in their sim- plest form are merely that Monday is the day of the moon, although I haven't the slightest idea why. I could never see that there was anymore moon on Monday than any other day- Maybe I just didn't look. Come to think of it, I am sure I didn't. In addition to this we have, through long experience, come to look for Monday at the beginning of the week, al- though there are some people so perverse as to say that it is really at the end. And if any chemist thinks he knows more about this than I do, just send 14m around. The Pherret has brought in the news that on a great number of ticket order-blanks there is a state- ment to the effect that extra Pur- due tickets may be purchased for $0.00. I am in favor of holding them to that. It would serve Mr. Fielding Hooray Yost just right if we did, and besides, maybe next time he wouldn't be so anxious to sign his name all over the nasty things. If he is to get all the checks made out to him in person, he might as well be made to stand some of the hardships too. Answer to 'Bored in Control' Come around any afternoon be- tween the hours of four at the Daily office. :MUjIC AND DRAMA MONDAY NIGHT: In the Men- delssohn Theatre the Russian mo- tion picture Old and New. Sergius Eisenstein, the Russian film direc- tor responsible through his Potem- kin and Ten Days That Shook The World, for most of the trends in cinematic experimentalism, was en- gaged by the Soviet government to make a series of pictures of which this is the first. The material of the picture is the Soviet attempt at a welding of agrarian and indus- trial civiliza$tions. In the picture, it is said that Eisenstein is allowed full scope for his individuality of style, CAROLA GOYA A Review by W'illiam J. Gorman Carola Goya last night presented a program of traditional and mod- ern Spanish dances to an audience, the size and enthusiasm of which certainly makes plausible the idea of a series of dance recitals throughout the year. Such pro- grams are a distinctive addition to Ann Arbor entertainment. And this in spite of the fact that Miss Goya proved an inferior art- ist. In two fields she seemed in- ferior. She lacked quality of emotion and technique to be signi- ficant in the difficult tradition of established folk dances. And she seemed to lack the intelligence and the musicianship to create new dances of any but a decorative significance. Comparison with La Argentina will perhaps illuminate this infer- iority. (I think it quite justified, also, since three of four of Miss Goya's creations used the same music as those of La Argentina). It was La Argentina who rescued the traditional Spanish dances from the vulgarising and falisfying influences of musical comedy gyp- sies. With the few formulas allow- able in the folk tradition (the fact of tradition being very probably here more a restriction than a sup- port,) she developed marvelous suppleness and variety of motion. This much is commonplace criti- cism of La Argentina who is New York's favorite dancer. What she seems to have done is the transforming into style of dances that had been rude stam- mers of -instinct; the disciplining of native dancing passions into formal patterns of motion. Yet because of the richness of her own sensibility she never lost the force of instinctive expression. Underly- ing and always apparent in the harmony and grace of motion was a nervous, trembling ardor. This intensity (which I take to be the only quality that makes these folk dances significant experiences) she largely communicated by continu- ous vivid life in her torso. There is an intense feeling resultant in the audience at the sight of a lithe body trembling with its participa- tion in patterns which ankles are executing. As I saw things last night, it was just this impassioned quality which Miss Goya lacked. Her torso was dull, stiff, cold. Her body wasn't lithe and supple enough to be an intense instrument of expression. Her appeal remained largely deco- rative. She seemed to know the figurative foundations of t h e dances and to execute them well. But the added expressive force in the medium doing that expression was missing. Her first group of dances lacked richness. The de- lightful lavishness of the costum- ing (La Argentina is very modest in this respect) may have rendered some unconscious compensation to the audience. But that type of appeal is a somewhat illegitimate extra-appeal. Miss Goya's technical incompe- tence was particularly noticeable in one of her own creations: the Fire Dance from DeFalla's opera. She actually evaded the exciting ryth- mical problems implicit in that music by interpreting the more dif- ficult ones with her fingers. There was no boldness at all. The use of the body was very feeble. La Argen- tina, who created the part, gives all her varied strength to an ex- tremely elaborate interpretation of this number which was in the cli- mactic position on her Detroit pro- gram. Miss Goya's Tango was another dull dance, being little but a mat- ter of steps and a lovely black dress. La Argentina gives to a Tango, exe- cuted without a partner, the cur- ious melancholy of isolation and a thwarted desire for embraces. It is a matter of richness. Significantly I think, Miss Goya's c>>nnnccfnl A anC astn . iz+ n-+ IMar a OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Lenses and Frames Made to Order Optical Prescriptions Filled HALLER S STATE STREET JEWELERS Satisfaction--Service .il Ilu lillllllflllllllll llllllllllln l 1ornl1lllllllllllflalff11 iat lnr11 J1 v Headquarters for Stationery Your name and address or monogram HYLITED in raised letters. 100 Sheets-100 Envelopes-$2.00 ALSO MICHIGAN SEAL STATIONERY _.l 1111 SOUTH UNIVERSITY HALF BLOCK EAST OF CAMPUS PHONE 4744 Complete Line of Everything Musical i PLEDGE BUTTONS, PINS BADGES GUARDS STATIONERY GIFTS Burr, Patterson Auld Co. Fraternity Jewelers 603 Church Street WANT ADS PAY! n University Music House Devoted to Music William 'Wade Hinshaw Cor. Maynard & William Phone 7515 THE MATCHLESS BALDWIN LINE OF PIANOS VICTOR MAJESTIC BRUNSWICK RADIOS UNEXCELLED MARTIN BAND INSTRUMENTS Terms to Suit