)Uf. " THE MICHIGAN DAIL.Y _T UESDAY, APRIL 263 1932 .. Society, where as regularly as clockwork the subjects t t of student apathy and hazing were considered and __________________________discussed. ublished every morning except Monday during the University The year of 1932 is singing its college swan song, >y the Board in Control of Student Publications. ember of the Western Conference Editorial Association. and in this last issue of the Daily we wish to offer he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- graduates o,ur sincere congratulations and best ation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise d in this paper and the local news published herein, wishes for their success in later life, confident that ntered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second they will make good. matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant_ _ aster General. Music and DramaI AN AMERICAN THEATRE FESTiVAL By Robert Henderson , " ubscription by, carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50j ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, -an. Phones: Editorial, 4925; 1;uriness, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Trelephone 4325 MANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L. TOBIN Editor................................... David M. Nichol Editor....................................... Carl Forsythe -al Director.............................Beach Conger, Jr. Editor ..,.......................... Sheldon C. Fullerton n's Editor.......................... Margaret M. Thompson ant News Editor...........................Robert L. Pierce NIGHT EDITORS B. Gilbreth J. Cullen Kennedy James Inglis Roland A. Goodman Jerry E. Rosenthal Karl Seiffert George A. Stautei CAM PUS OPHION Lters published in this coltiin should not be construed as expresnmg the e litorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous com- mn ni dtions will be disregarded. The names of comninmicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. (,ontrib- utors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. A Protest Against The Hopwood Distribution Method (This article has been written at the request of Mr. H. T. Parker, and is shortly to appear in Mr. Parker's Dramatic Page in the Boston Eve- ruing Transcript. It is here printed by permission.) All America is familiar with the distinguished music and drama fes- tvals that make England and cen- tral Europe each summer the ar- n W. Jones v W. Arnheim -d F. I1la1nertz rd C. Campbell as Connellan t S. Deutsch A. Huber Sports Assistants john W. Thomas REPORTERS 1harold F. KMute i uuIm 5. Marshall Roland Martin fienry Meyer Albert H. Newman E. lerome Petfit Prudence Foster Alice Gilbert Frances Manchester lizabeth Mann Charles A. Sanford .ToLn W. Pritchard Joseph iRevihan C. Hart Schaaf Brackley Shaw Parker Snyder Glenn R. Winters Margaret O'Brien Beverly Stark Alma Wadsworth Josephine Woodhatns im Carver rice Collins se Crandall Feldman. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 RLES T. KLIN ....................Business Manages RIS P. JOHNSON...................... Assistant Manager Department Managers tising......................................Vernon Bishop tising Contracts............................. harry R. Begley 'uising Service............................ Byron C. Veddei ations..................................William T. Brown nts .................................... Richard Stratemei n's Business Manager ......................Ann W. Vernor IAronson rt E. Buraley 1Clark rtFinn na Becker ne ischlgrund Gallmeyer erine Jackson thy TLaylin Assistants ArthurF. Kon Iluina rd Schnacke Grafton W. Sharp Virgvitia McComb t C'arolIine Mosher helen ()hson !1 len Scuitnde May Seef is d Ioald A. Johnson, I] Dean ''nrner Don Lyon Becrnard 11. Good I1 een Spencer Kath Iryn Spencer Jathryn Stork C'lre l1 ser TOd ary Elizabeth Watts NIGHT EDITOR-KARL SEIFFERT TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1932 pport the esh Air Camp PPEALS are being made at present by officers of the University Fresh Air camp for funds maintain the institution this year. Approxi- tely $2,000 will be needed to meet expenses and is to be gathered by contributions from fra- iities and a tag day to be held next week by' Ebers of the "M" club. Every year there are different organizations nsoring tag days to raise .money for some rea- or other and most of them are worthwhile. e of the most worthwhile things for which tag s are held on the Michigan campus is the Fresh camp fund and, it is tomthis that we urge fra- iities, which have already received letters, and er members of the student body, to contribute. [t is natural that anyone giving money for some se should wonder what the funds are used for. money is used for the benefit of poor city dren who are given a chance to spend a few ks in the fresh air, eat nourishing food and in eral enjoy things which they cannot get in heat and dust of. the city streets. This year,1 h more people out of work, there is a need something such as the Fresh Air camp andl number of children needing the benefits this ri t thn rbefre To The Editor: ;tistic centers of the world. At Mal- Charges of inefficiency have been frequently vern and Stratford, Salzburg, Mun- levelled at, and often deserved by, the Hopwood ich and Vienna, Prague and Dres-, Awards committee. Individual members of the com- den and Baireuth arc gathered for mittee have frankly, if privately, confessed their inability to handle, in the best interests of all, the two months each year the out- large sums of money involved. Nowhere is this in- standing artists and artisans of the ability more patently evidenced than in that section Continent. The great directors, the of the rules which determines the eligibility of the great scenic designers, the great contestants in the minor and major divisions. composers and the great authors As the rules now stand, only seniors and grad- combine with the ranking singers uates are eligible to compete for the major awards- and actors to create artistic tri- in which some $10,000 is being disbursed-while any- umphs that are national and.inter- body, including seniors and graduates, may compete national in their importance. To for the .$2,000 offered in the minor awards. This each of these centers, quite literal- year, according to figures published in THE DAILY, ly, comes-the world: Seats are at 40 contestants submitted 67 manuscripts in the major a dear price, and each premiere is contest, and 75 contestants submitted 129 manu- fraught with an excitement, a tense scripts in the minor contest. To put it differently, expectation that preludes all thrill- one-third of the total number of contestants are ing creation. competing for five-sixths of the prize money, while At present America goes to Eu- two-thirds of the contestants are fighting for one- rope. Steamships grow wealthy on sixth of the money! The absurdity of this situation thei . . heircargoes that make up fullyl is manifest on the face of it. half of the audiences that attend The Hopwood contest is the only one to my know- the great Festivals of the old world. edge which, having a junior and senior division. Why, however, there should not be restricts the senior division, and throws the junior similarly distinguished and brilli- open to everybody. This condition, distressingly ant dramatic festivals in our own thoughtless itself, fosters consequences which are country has never been answered. even more vicious. It is an open secret that the If, as is certain, the great European Hopwood committee, in its extensive publicity efforts, theatres have much to teach us in is endeavoring to attract outside writers to compete tradition and experience; similarly, for the Hopwood awards. That in itself would be we, in our foremost plays and play- defensible, provided that these writers were forced ers, have a fine distinction in our to compete with the entire student body,and thereby own right. Our dramatists are stir- truly earn the awards given them. Under the present ring the world, our leading actors rules they must compete with but a handful of seniors can stand comparison with the --a mere fraction of the student body. This virtually great continental giants; our thea- amounts to subsidization of those professional writers .tre has wealth, technical resource, who are willing to take up residence, for a year, m sophistication in its audiences. With Ann Arbor. I cannot believe that such was Avery such favoring circumstances, a time Hopwood's intention. Hopwood was interested in is ripe in America for a center that developing new writers; not in giving the old one: will focus each spring the high a new lease on life. points of the season just passing. The only way, it would seem, that this can be Ann Arbor, which is the seat of accomplished is by a change in the rules to take the University of Michigan, already effect before next year. Such a change would lim- is famous for its May Festival of the minor awards to undergraduates below the rank music. If Ann Arbor has created a of senior, and open the major contest to all students great festival of music, it is easy Better still, I would suggest that the committee keep to see how one should conceive the a particularly close eye upon the scripts entered in idea (the ideal) Qf presenting each this year's minor contest. Should a contestant be s p r i n g an equally distinguished discovered who, in amount and consistently high Dramatic Season. One of the most standard of submitted material, ranks above one of important factorsthat favored such the four highest major entries, let him be awarded a festival was the erection four one of the major prizes. This would be in keeping years ago of a beautiful, splendidly with the spirit of the Hopwood bequest, which, A equipped theatre in connection with feel sure, is intended rather to benefit writers, re- the Michigan League building at gardless of scholastic rank, than seniors and grad-' the University. The Lydia Mendel- uates who happen to be able to write. ssohn theatre was named in honr' Arthur Clifford. of the donor's mother and is the --~--~~-gift of Mr. Gordon Mendelssohn Mr. Wagner Tires of Hearing Democrats and Repub of Millbrook and Detroit. This thea- licans Slam Each Other; te Slams Both te is equipped with a plaster sky- To The Editor: dome, a lighting system designed It must be ;very encouraging to the Democratic by Thomas Wilfred and a large and Republican leaders to read that st'udents at the construction room b e n e a t h the universities are rallyig to their banners and are stage, connected with it by an ele- vator. Its auditorium holds seven carrying out the traditional policy of slamming the hundred people, and, beautifully opposition. First an editorial is printed in The Daily decorated, it furnishes a perfect informing us of the break-up in the Democratic party. background for a season of the first A good Democrat thereupon become indignant and plays and players of the New York writes a spirited letter in support of his party; in stage. addition he rakes the Hoover administration over The Dramatic Season in previous the coals as a good Democrat should. Since there years has brought to Ann Arbor seems to be such a bitter antagonism between the such artists as Margaret Anglin, two parties, I wonder if any adherents of either Blanche Yurka, Thomas Wilfred, party can point out even one difference between TQm. Powers, the dancer Martha them. Both parties have the facetious habit of pre- Garham, Mrs. Richard Mansfield, paring slogans and platforms to hoodwink the people, Violet Heming, Ernest Cossart. The and the regrettable thing is their success in doing so. productions have included both the The admirable criticism of the Hoover administra- "Antigone" and the Electra" of So- tion in Thursday's "Campus Opinion" needs no phocles; Congreve's "The Way of comment, but then as a solution it offers the Demo- the World"; Shaw, Srindberg, Os- cratic party under the progressive (?) Franklin D. car Wilde, Tchekov and so on down Roosevelt. What, if I may ask, is there progressive to the very latest successes such as about him? Perhaps the writer means Roosevelt "Caprice," "The Royal Family,' will find new slogans to feed the people in place of "Serena Blandish" tin their sea- the trite and hackneyed "full dinner pail" and "pros- sons), and last spring Noel Cow- perity is just around the corner." aid's "Private Lives" which was Go on, student leaders. Sing the praises of the presented by personal permission: present parties. When you graduate and find no from the author while it was still jobs, when you then see that the education you have running in New York. does not help you, when you are thrown into the If the Dramatic Season includes i actual play of politics, perhaps Fou will see how a tragedy of Sophocles it takes care foolish it was to look to the Democratic and Repub- to balance it heavily in favor of lican parties for help. Bernard Shaw and Noel Coward, The present parties exist primarily for big busi- Someday if the Ann Arbor Drama- ness and the vested interests; they legislate for big tic Season should rise to the true business and are controlled by big business, but we = stature of the European festivals go on believing we have a democracy. Witness the it hopes to do so easily, unaffected- legislation in Congress today. Legislation for big ly and with a saving sense of hu- business but what was done to relieve the unem- mor. It strives to measure accom- s q r . C 101 Io C T :it n a is greuer uan eve u i. harity camps are always a good thing. They boys or girls, who have only unhealthy influ- s in. the city, to where they receive a good rtunity to grow and enjoy nature. Sociolog- they are taken away from evil environments' h are sometimes prevalent in the slums of< ity and receive an insight into beneficial fields agh skilled instructors.; he University Fresh Air camp is such an ution. It deserves the support and co-opera- of everyone and should receive both of these1 the student body.1 ~~D1ITORCAL C ME11 EMiT '32] (McGill Daily) 'ime and tide wait for no man," and so another1 ge year with its attendant joys and disillusion- s nears its close. The freshmen, what are left' bout to become lordly sophomores, to make way t. new jot of innocent youths; the sophomore nes a junior; the junior a senior; and the senior,; ling the apex of his desires, a full fledged grad- And so we draw nigh to convocation. hose students who are graduating are leaving heir old associations behind them. They are ing a much harder school than any they have, xperienced; that of the college of hard knocks experience, the business world. No longer will be seen in their old haunts, chinning with Bill leman, Harry Grimsdale or any other membersa .e janitorial staff; no more will they disturb the4 ity of the library; or fool about the Union. They passed on to make way for another generation. ad yet they are not altogether forgotten. Many eir names will continue to be familiar long after themselves have graduated. McGill will be proud minember that such and such a person who has ed athletic fame, scholastic note, or a high repu- n in their field of activity in later life, was a ployed? Nothing. Any such help would destroy the plishment with mere intention. The principles of "rugged individualism" and "initiative" majority of its plays are gay and upon which this country was founded. Let the people I sophisticated-purposely-and act- starve; unless you do so you will undermine their ed by players equal to the polished initiative, but for God's sake help the railroads and brilliance they require. In no sense industry otherwise our investments will be lost. can the Dramatic Season be called The masses of the United States will never get a repertory or stock company, for anything from the present parties, and until they l each play has a special star or realize this their condition will not change. They group of artists especially selected must cast off the fetters of the present political from the New York theatre because I