PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY Y, OCTOBER 7, 1930 Published every morning except Monday diuring the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associrted Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis- patches credited to it or not otherwise credited inrthie 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 Editorr....... . Mary L. Behymer. Telegraph Editor ..........Harold 0. 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 S..Baer, Jr. Powers Moulton Irving J. Blumberg Wilbur J. Myers Donald 0. Boudeman Robert L. Pierce Charles M. Brown Slher M. Quraisi +George T. Callison C. Richard Racine Thomas M. Cooley Jerry E. Rosenthal George Fisk George Rubenstein Yjernard W. Freund David Sachs Morton Frank Charles A. Sanford Saul Friedberg Karl Seiffert Frank B. Gilbreth Robert F. Shaw Karl E. Goeliner Edwin M. Smith Jack Goldsmith G;eorge A. Stauter Roland Goodman Alfred R. Tapert William H. Harris John S. Townsend James H. Inglis Robert D. Townsend EmilJ. Konopinski Max H. Weinberg Denton C. Kunze Joseph F. Zias past Interfraternity councils. The University has been forced to deal with a passive and impotent rep- resentation of fraternity interests. In fairness it must be admitted that such actions on the part of the administration as have been considered by the houses untoward or unduly interfering have largely the result of a lack of real frater- 1 nity opinion or proper presenta- tion of their side in the matter. If the measures of the dean's of- fice have seemed encroaching or ill-timed, the Interfraternity coun- cil can supply some mitigation and certainly more amity. What the situation clearly calls for is a con- certed, well-considered representa- tion of fraternity interests, and an effective speaking voice of power with a direct means of appeal. It should be clear that we hold no especial brief for the Interfrater- nity council above the efficacy of any other campus organization. But what we do urge is that that body has a real issue which must be met with clear-headed and ener- getic concern, in contrast to its former scamperings and pawing of the air. ATDRLL ICAND;DRA __RMA~ SHAME SHAME!EISENSTEIN'S "OLD AND NEW." SHAME! WE RENT *WE SERVICE WE SELL adios CROSLEY AMRAD BOSCH SHOP Tel. 2-2812 615 E. William r1 ai- Editorial CommentI 0- Lynne Adams Betty Clark Elsie Feldman Elizabeth Gribble Emily G. Grimes Elsie M. Hoffmeye j ean Levy Dorothy Magee Mary McCall Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Jean Rosenthal Cecilia Shriver Frances Stewart er Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Claire Trussell Barbara Wright BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BBUSINESS MANAGER T. HOLLISTER MABLEY Assistant Manager KASPER H. HALVERSON Department Managers Advertising.................Charles T. Kline Advertising................Thomas M. Davis Advertising'............ William W. Warboys Service.s................w.Norris J. Johnson Publication............ Robert W. Williamson Circulation.............Marvin S.. Kobacker Accounts ...................Thomas S. Muir Business Secretary . ..Mary J. Ienan Assistants Thomas E. Hastings Harry R. Begley William Brown Richard H. Hiller Vernon Bishop William W. Davis [f. Fred Schaefer Joseph Gardner Ann Verner Dorthea Waterman Alice McCully Dorothy Bloomgard4 Dorothy Layli t Josephine Convisser Bernice 'Glaser Hortense Gooding Byron V. Vedder Erle Kightlinger 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 Mary Watts Marian Atran Sylvia Miller TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1930 Night Editor: CARL S. FORSYTHE MEET THE ISSUE At the opening of each new col- lege year, the various campus or- ganizations and honor societies are in a flurry to map out their pro- grams for the coming months. Each seeks to hew out a sphere of activities for itself or justify its existence in divers ' ways, some quite painful. In recent years, a paucity of legitimate interests has induced some to manufacture a cause celebre out of thin air, others to resurrect old, half-dead customs, while still others are comforted by their traditional routine duties. The upshot of this is what might be expected-a batch of frantic maneuvers at first, and finally a pusillanimous ennui, with down- right little in the way of signifi- cant leadership or accomplish- ment. In this hey-day of sorrowful ges- tures, the Interfraternity council is quite fortunate. When it meets this afternoon, it will find no oc- casion for bickering or padding its agenda. As never before, its res- ponsibilities and duties are set out in unmistakable signs; its excuse for existence has never been less dubious. This year the fraterni- ties are not only on the defensive, they are confronted by a series of problems and aggravations, the so- lution and result of which cannot fail to either smooth out or wrap the course of their future on the campus. Quite obviously, deferred rush- ing is the most imminent concern that begs attention. The Interfra- ternity council can by its attitude toward the project and its ideas for putting the plan in operation give real assistance in preventing. a cumbersome monstrosity from being saddled on the houses. Through cooperation and intelli- gent criticism it can mitigate any disastrous effects the plan may have. Further, if the council shows an As The College Open (From the New York Evening Post) In sober survey it may be a- greed that the colleges and the universities of America are in read- iness for an unusual year of achievement. There is a sense of stability in higher education today, the reward for a decade or more of disturbing development. Two major problems have been worked out to an approximate solution. One is the question of enrollments; the other a parallel problem of en- dowments. After the war the influx of stu- dents into the major institutions of learning threatened at times to upset traditions and policies which had seemed safe beyond challenge. All sorts of new demands were made on the colleges, some of them reasonable and others inspired on- ly by restlessness and the radical- ism which followed the war. It is altogether to the credit of higher education in this country that every effort was made to assimilate the unprecedented crowds of stu- dents, to meet their needs by revi- sion of the curriculum and to re- consider the traditions and princi-. ples of pedagogy which were estab- lished in more leisurely times. The effort to do these things resulted in a period of experiments, some of which went too far and fast and left pedagogy in disrepute. Others were ridden like hobbyhorses until they came close to absurdity. A few proved their worth and won their way into the theory of edu- cation. After ten years of trial and error, higher education is better for its battle with the problem of big en- rollments. Meanwhile the occasion for the problem has largely disap- peared, partly by the operation of economic factors and partly be- cause the colleges themselves have discovered that mere numbers do not make a great institution and have regulated entrance and rais- ed the requirements for gradua- tion. Today the universities are not so greatly embarrassed by the number and variety of students who seek four years of semiadult schooling as . an afterthought to high school or as a pleasant inter- lude before the serious business of life. Most of those who make this year's enrollment's are seriously intentioned. And for these the college of today offers wider and richer opportunities than ever be- fore in academic history. This is in part because the uni- versities have endured and over- come the temptations of too much apparent prosperity. It must also be credited to the fact that recent years have given the schools an op- portunity to restore and increase their endowments. The prosperity of the post-war period paid its tithe to education. It paid for new buildings and equipment, n e w courses and fellowships, new op- portunities for students competent to use them. This year's host of hopeful youngsters will enjoy all the advantages of a period of ma- jor expansion in university facili- ties. The serious business of educa- tion should return now to its prop- er place of importance. It is al- ready doing so, by evidence of the increasing emphasis on scholastic attainment, the triumph of the sense of proportion in academic af- As I was saying, Shame! And I'm saying it to you, all you Men of old Michigan. Chivalry is dead among you.,If you don't believe it, just be honest with yourself and think how many times in the last few years you have aided a damsel1 in distress. How many of your cloaks bear mud-splotches glor- iously earned by spanning a puddle to save the dainty foot of some fragile Miss? Not one, I venture to state, and yet you can walk along in the sight of all with head held high in spurious self-esteem! Alas, I say, that such things should be and go unreproved! And once again I say SHAME! * * * As an attempt to awaks the cam- pus from present deplorable state of complacent unchivalrousness, the Rolls Artist has suggested that diplomas be issued for chivalrous deeds performed by Rolls readers. In compliance with his request he was set to work making out the diplomas which are to be of three grades, namely:- 1 "Esquire," to be awarded for minor deeds such as buying food for blind date after the dance. 2. "Knight," to be awarded for deeds of greater nobility, such as rescue from mice, beetles, and similar menaces. 3. "Crusader," to be given only once each semester for deeds of extraordinary heroism and moral courage such as speaking to the blind date the next day when walk- ing with fraternity brothers to whom you have described her 'charms. * * * Write in your deeds to the Editor of Toasted Rolls clo The Michigan Daily. If they are deemed of suffi- cient merit, they will be printed and the awards in accordance with the above classification. Come on, fellows, the diplomas are worth it even if the project isn't. And while we're on the sub- ject of awards and prizes, none of you want to pass up the ooportunity to win the Rolls Memorial Medal offered to the first man to eat a meal in Martha Cook Dormitory dis- guised as a woman. The medal is struck from solid silver and will be given upon the testi- mony of three competent wit- nesses. A lesser offer (namely one special diploma and a Rolls Reporter badge) is offered to the man who can start outside of U. Hall, and, within five min- utes, find his way up into the Dome thereof. Previous investi- gation is barred. GAME. Here is a contributed game that requires two players, one playee, and, if possible, one scorekeeper. Without the preliminary hooey usual in describing such sports, I shall proceed straightway to the actual method. The players walk side by side down the street at a slow rate of speed on any some- what dark and drizzly night (in Ann Arbor, on any night) and wait until someone walks up from be- hind and endeavors to pass them. Their cue is then to separate in such a manner as to cause the would-be passer to walk between them in the meantime accelerating their own progress to equal his. An observer can be of great assistance in the scoring which goes as fol- lows:--. Playee slows down suddenly 1 pt Playee stops to light cigarette ........................ 2 pts Playee speeds up enough to slip and break leg .......3 pts Playee crosses street ..... 4 pts Playee gives up after several changes of pace and either breaks down and cries or pastes nlavers in nose ........ 10 pts I see that the old add about the "room for rent" between hospital and campus is running again. This causes me to wonder which one of the two finally got the last man that lived there. Give me the hos- pital any time. * * * A Review by William J. Gorman A very curious and, on the whole, worthwhile experience is afforded by the picture Old and New which opened at the Mendelssohn last night and is to run for a week there. Curious because of the circum- stances of its creation. Eisenstein, the famous director, made it under contract to the Soviet government. That is, an astute, sophisticated mind, marvellously aware of the compelling powers of the cinematic technique, was asked to convince naive primitive peasants of certain fundamental Soviet ideas. The re- sult a priori would be a very per- verse art form (except by Tolstoy's aesthetic).I Indeed it is perverse. But the measure of the perversity is almost the measure of the American's pleasure. The picture aims to glorify the mechanization of agri- culture (a problem about which the American can be completely de- tached, since it is dated by at least a hundred and fifty years) and incidentally to break down the peasant's stubborn subservience to the will of God. Hence Eisenstein gives a black and white contrast. There are striking shots of . an; elaborate religious procession turn- ed out during a drought to beseech God for rain. The peasants are shown fervently (and rythmically) dropping their heads into the sands in prayer. And yet No Rain says the subtitle in mammoth let- ters. The camera immediately shifts to a barn where a new cream sepa- rator is being unveiled. Will it work? Will it THICKEN? The camera finds tense states of anx- ious, skeptical expectancy on many, many faces in the barn. Will it thicken? Ah, there it comes. It does thicken. The camera finds many, many peasants grinning in anticipation of future personal inertia. The logic is like that throughout the picture. Prayer for rain fails. But the cream separator works. Therefore:over with God, the old. And in with the cream separators and tractors, the NEW! This spur- iousness in the material forces Eisenstein's technique to become apparent. And it is fascinating to note his magnification of a cream separator and a tractor into tense affairs to shout about. There are several shots of very amusing, very convincing symbol- ism. A rich farmer refuses the heroine a horse. To symbolize n i g g a rd 1 y affluence, Eisenstein pudgy skin on the several chins and underjaw of the wealthy farmer. Contrasted with that shot is a previous one of a poor farmer sleeping, in the mud with cucura- chas crawling over his strong, honest, tight skin. Eisenstein's is a dexterous camera. This bad job done magnificently gives an opportunity for technical study and malicious pleasure. Cur- ious but worthwhile. 90C Men's Half Soles $1.19 This is Special Reduction. Our fine workmanship and A-I Ma- terials remain the same. VALET SERVICE SHOP 117 South Main Street In the Heart of the Business Section. We recommend our rapid while your waiting service. '4 STUDENT'S PERSONAL STATIONERY Send today for samples-letter- heads and envelopes--also frater- nity or sorority--highest quality ripple finish-boxed-choice of three colors. 200 envelopes, 200 letterheads, only $4.75. Money making agency open to live stu- dent in each college. Write for particulars. Address Dept. 030, Merchants Industries, Inc., Third & Wayne Avenues, Dayton, Ohio. SPECIAL Shoe Repairing J-- p WANT ADS PAY! ENGLISH AND FRENCH BERETS In Twenty-Four Shades 95c and $1.50 MARTHA A. NILSEN Furrier and Ladies' Tailor 228 South Thayer _ s i t 1rl 1111rt11llI r11lfII 1111il 111111#11 U 111#111111#111111#1111111111111111111I~1111lilliillllli are pledged for stgle and value - to everySooity * -w Regent pump in black BLACKkid with white trimming AND WHiT.E on the outer side of the shoe only. - FOOTWEAR FOR EVERY AAA to C OCCASION Gypsy tie of Black suede, Black kid, or Brown kid with reptile trim featur- ing the new moccasin vamp. -Jacob-0%sonq1 Opposite the Michigan Fill I11111111# IImIm11 1 1 1 1m1mm1 Im # m Ladies' Half Soles CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY. For those who are not yet aware of its existence or of its attractive importance in Ann Arbor musical life, it should be explained that the Chamber Music Society is a group of faculty wives organized for the specific purpose of patching an in- evitable hole in the Choral Union series. The contrast between Hill Auditorium's vast stretches and the intimate quality most desired of Chamber performances has made impossible the frequent inclusion of Chamber music in the Choral Union Series. So the Chamber Music Society each year sponsors a series of four concerts, made available to resi- dents and faculty members at $5 for the series, or $1.50 each concert. A very generous acknowledgement is made to the student body, stud- ent series tickets being available at $1.50 for the series. To repeat, students are offered four concerts of excellent quality for $1.50. The organizations engaged for this year's series include the Gor- don String Quartet, of Chicago, the Musical Art Quartet of New York, a French trio making its first American tour, and the Detroit String Quartet. The Gordon Quartet which opens the series is led by Jacques Gordon, formerly the popular concertmaster of the Chicago Symphony, and was endowed last spring in order that the members might devote their By the way, have any of you fellows noticed the sign on the Majestic Theatre this week? You have? Well, I'm certainly surprised at you! ' * * * Two By Four writes in at a loss for "Rah Rah" tricks and pranks I II I