THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MA 8, 1932 ublished every morning except Monday during the Univeirsity by the Board in Con tro of Student Publications. Iember of the Western Conference Editorial Association. 'he Associated press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- atn of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ed in thic paper and the local news published herein. :ntered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant aster General. ubscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50 ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, ;an. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. recognized merit have grown slowly during the.- past 10 years, expanding gradually in well thought out directions. Other departments whose support now requires many thousands of dollars have sprung into existence almost over night as experi- KILL ments or at the particular whim of certain admin-jSAMMY istrators. In view of this, is it too much to ask JAY that a painstaking and intelligent re-evaluation of Boy oh boy, did we even have a all departments be made in the face of the present ro esy, dadmy Jay, hure! finacialembrrasment? jnarrow escape. Sammy Jay, dur- ing Uncle Johnny Chuck's absence, slipped a column into the good old copy basket while we weren't look- SM an DRA IA ,ing and very nearly put ole Uncle Elmer in the wrong. However, we 1rescued it, and here are the mangl- Goeta Ljungberg, Swedish prima donna operatic j ed remains: star who will make her American Festival debut at EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR RICIA 2D L. TOBIN a Editor ................................... David M. Nichol Editor.............................,......... Carl Forsythe, orial Director...........................Beach Congyr, Jr. s Editor..............................Sheldon C. Fullerton en's Editor................. .Margaret M. Thompson ;tant News Editor.................. ..... Robert L. fierce1 NIGHT EDITORS k B. Gilbreth I. Cullen Kennedy James Inglis Roland A. Goodman Jerry E. Rosenthal Karl Seilkrt George A. Stauter i ., n W. Jones nley W. Arnheim nald F. Blankertz vard C. Campbelh omas Connellan ,ert S. 1eutsch d A. Hluber Sports Assistants John W. Thomas REPORTERS Harold F. Klute lohn S. Marshall Roland Martin tlenry Meyer Albert }. Newman ]E. Teromle Pettit Prudence Foster Alice Gilbert Frances Manchester Elizabeth Mann I Charles A. Sanford John W. Pritchard Joseph lterihan C. Hart Schaaf Brackley Shaw Parker Snyder Glenn R. Winters Margaret O'Brien Beverly Stark Alma Wadsworth Josephine Woodhanis 'iam Carver trice Colins ise Crandall ie Feldman BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 ARLES T. KLINE......................Business Managei RRIS P. JOHNSON ..................... Assistant Manager Department Managers ertising ............................ Vernon Bishop rtising Contracts...........................Harry R. Begley .ertising Service........................... Byron C. Vedder lications...................................William T. Brown ounts ................................Richard Stratemeir men's Business Manager......................Ann W. Vernor il Aronson ert E. Bursley n Clark iert Finn na Becker ine Fischgrund iGallmeyer berine Jackson othy Laylin . Assistants Arthur F. Kohn Bernard Schnacke Grafton W. Sharp Virginia McComb Caroline Mosher Helen Olson ] lelen Schmude May Seefried Donald A. Johnson, II ])ean Turner Don Lyon Bernard H. Good Helen Spencer Kathryn Spencer Kathryn Stork Clare Unger Mary Elizabeth Watts the Thursday evening concert of the Ann Arbor May Festival, May 19, has just received the following encomium from Charles E. Watt, Publisher of Music News, under date of May 6: "Mme. Goeta Ljungberg, beautiful young Swedish soprano, has completed her first season at the Metro- politan as an internationally famous heroine. As a Wagnerian singer she gripped New York in a spell that was phenomenal last winter and this spring she is packing them in at the festivals (Chi- cago hears her in May at the Northshore Festival). At the end of May she will leave for Europe. It is now announced that she will be at the Metropolitan throughout the entire season next year and that to her other roles she will add Tosca, Santuzza, Elizabeth, Melisande and Electra. Unusual honors and distinctions that have been piled on her this year have been pompous and gay in turn. The King of Belgium has decorated her with lhe 'Order of Leopold.' The famous Dutch Treat Club of New York feted her as honor guest. When she sang Kundry in "Parsifal" at the Metropolitan she wanted to wear the dress she wore when she sang the part in London. The gown was a gift to her from the Prince of Wales, to whom it had been givenI by one of the Matadors in India. The Indian crown and costume have a worth of about $40,000, and when delivered to Mine. Ljungberg at Covent Garden was escorted by two policemen. April 26 the Madame sang in Allentown, Pa., and the following is a sample of the encomiums of praise proffered her by the press: "With the same fervor and histrionic power that marked Mme. Ljungberg's singing of the role of Sieg- linde in 'Die Walkeure' the night of her debut, the soprano sang two glorious Wagnerian arias and the 'Voi lo sapete' from 'Cavalleria Rusticana," and the 'Pace, pace, mio dio' from Verdi's 'La Forza del Destino.' But even more delightful than the arias,/perhaps, was the soprano's interpretations of several Scandin- avian songs, the Swedish Dancing Song, completely winning the esteem of her hearers. The Brahms and Strauss compositions were exquisitely done. Goeta Ljungberg presented a striking picture when she appeared on the lyric stage last night. Her stately presence compelled attention at once and her, voice undoubtedly matches her poise in majesty and beauty. Majestic was the adjective heard on all sides last evening." I SCRIEEN REILECTIONS AT THE MAJESTIC "The Crowd Roars" ' > : NIGHT EDITOR-JAMES H. INGLIS SUNDAY, MAY 8, 1932 ishroom I * * k! ,rstructure ITHOUT presuming to give administrative - heads of the University advice on how to >rune the budget 15 per cent for the coming year, t seems timely to point out a few figures regard- ng University expenses which are matters of ecord on the budgets of former years. It was proposed last week in this column that i blanket salary cut of the entire organization vould weaken the whole University, whereas, a e-evaluation of each department of the University ind a subsequent pruning out of departments vhich have failed to prove themselves of value vould strengthen the University and balance the >udget at the same time.; The remarkable growth of a great administra- ive superstructure is one of the most striking: >oints which a comparison of the budgets of 1921 nd 1931 reveals. Under the heading, "Adminis- ration" we find $342,000 were spent in 1921 and 770,000 in 1931, or an increase of 125 per cent. 'his increase is alarming enough as it is. but a loser scrutiny of the budget itemizing reveals ,a nushroom like growth of this administrative side f the University which is even more disquieting. This apparent increase in administrative costs f 125 per cent is as low as it is because of two ractices used in itemizing the budget. In the frst place there are several large items included nder the head "Administration" in 1921 which y 1931 have been moved over into a new category, Independent departments or Divisions." For xample, one of the largest administration items of 921, the Health Service, then spending $54,000 a ear, really does not belong under administration t all according to the 1931 way of classifying de- artnents. Secondly the percentage increase of le administrative costs is masked to some extent y the inclusion under this head of many charges which are more or less constant from year to year nd which do not precisely come under the term dministration, for example, fire insurance and iplorna fees. Weeding out such non-controversial items from. he list of administration expenses as postage on Jniversity bulletins and boiler insurance, and icluding only the purely administrative functions uch as the president's office, the office of the dean f students, the registrar's office, the work of ataloging and contacting alumni, educational in- estigation, and occupational information, we find he comparison of expenditures between 1921 and; 931 amazing. In 1921 $133,000 was paid for this vork, while it took $405,000 in 1931 to accomplish he work included under the same offices and the tew offices created since that time. This amounts o an increase of 300 per cent in what it seems easonable to define as administrative. The total budget of the University, on the >ther hand, has'increased only 100 per cent during he ten years, and the size of the student body now ias not yet increased by more than 50 per cent. Phenomenal is the growth, for one example, of he office of the dean of students. In 1921 when ts head was still a member of the teaching faculty, t cost the taxpayers of the state less than $6,000. [oday it costs the taxpayers $46,000. If a comparison is wanted to bring out the true ize of this department, figures from the 1931 >udget show that the cost of the dean's office, with hat of the health service added, amounts alto-} James Cagney, that little fellow who has become so well known to moviegoers as the hard-boiled taxi- driving sort of individual, has another role along the same lines in "The Crowd Roars." The picture con- cerns the career of a famous racing driver, Cagney, and his younger brother, played by Eric Linden. Linden nearly steals the picture from his older brother during a few of the fiery-tempered scenes with whichw the picture is amply suppiied but both boys seem capable of holding their own. Joan Blondell and Ann Dvorak, that brunettish new-comer to silver sheet circles, play opposite the two racers, and the young ladies are not so slow on taking the turns themselves. Joan appears to us at times as just another "dizzy blonde"-and it is true that she always has that type to portray-but the little gal certainly must have something underneath. It might be a certain amount of acting ability, since she does nicely this time. Thrills, if you like to see flaming racers speeding around a dirt track at night, are there aplenty. Spills, if you like the tune of an ambulance siren, are not lacking. Ann Dvorak alone is capable of provid- ing enough of the female interest, and she does it. There are some excellent shots of actual races at the famous Indianapolis speedway, and also closeups of some honest-to-goodness champion racing drivers. And the picture is not slow. E.J.P. Sammy Jay has been dog- gone despondent since his big benefactor left town. He has been searching everywhere for some means to drown his sor- row. Just yesterday morning he was walking moodily about the Campus when the course of his travels brought him up short in front of the Architectural School. There, sitting on the grass, was a strange figure. But there was something familiar about it. We peered! Why to be sure it was the dancing red- head of the J. G. P. Good old Mary Phillips and with a draw- ing board? As we watched the surrounding countryside took shape. Suddenly a small boy playing the unherald part of the street urchin strolled up. "Gee," he said, is that house on fire?" * * * While we're on the subject of Ar- chitects have you' noticed the title of this year's May Party. Bal Exo- tique! Tsk. Tsk. This in itself is bad enough, but we have learned from authoritative sources t h a t they are also having a subscription tea on the afternoon of the dance. My! My! It's hardly safe for a nice big he-man to walk thestreets any more. SPECIAL FROM J. CHUCK! Dear Sammy: Which end of I these trains do you get off from, anyhow. Please wire im- mediately. I'm in a jam. Af- fectionately Yours, J. Chuck. Dear Johnny: It doesn't make any difference. Both ends ought to stop. As Ever, Sammy Jay. Well, Folks, you have no idea the struggle that Sammy is having try- ing to win the Editorship of Toast- ed Rolls. Thousands of competitors are surrounding my chair. Even more than that, five-hundred! Any- how, Sammy has his little heart set on being J. Chuck's successor. Can't you give him some encourage- ment. Please write just a short note to Sammy Jay in care of Toasted Rolls of the Michigan Daily and watch his little face brighten with the joy of knowing that some- where, someone is thinking of him. Just Brighten Up The Corner, Where You Are. Yours until the re- urn of Uncle Johnny. SAMMY JAY So you can see that as far as we are concerned, Sammy Jay just won't get our recommendation. It seems the captain of the sopho- more games, one William Weber McRoy, wanted to arouse spirit among the class. So he declared that the sophomores ought to throw one of their own class mates into the river and get the angry ire of the class of '34 aroused. It was all well and good until someone sug- gested that he was the man to be thrown in. Quick as a flash, Weber remember- ed that if anyone did anything to the captain, that side forfeited the games. And he didn't want to win that way. So they tried the presi- dent, vice-president, secretary and treasurer. All couldn't quite see the point, except the treasurer, who agreed. But at the last moment, something went wrong, so captain McRoy had to drum up spirit by words rather than deeds. Ah, this good old collich spirit. * * ' rid INi Ii 1 EDITOIlAL COJMNENT I DEFINING EDUCATION (Purdue Exponent) Even with the widely varied and somewhat in-j volved definitions of education which we have today, still additional ones appear now and then. Among the latest is that of Dr. Nicholas Butler, president of Columbia university, who defines education as fol- lows: "Education is a gradual adjustment to the spir- itual possessions of the race, with a view to realizing one's potentialities and to assist in carrying forward that complex of ideas, arts, and institutions which we I call civilizaton. "Those spiritual possessions may be variously classified, but they certainly are at least five-fold. The child is entitled to his scientific inheritance, to his institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without them all he cannot become a truly educated and truly civilized man." Surely the educated person must be familiar with and in accord with the spiritual and intellectual poc- sessions of his race, but he must be more than that. Society, like industry, is always undergoing an evolu- tionary process, presenting for each of us a constant- lu e'hannyi-"vo iimrnmvh-.onm"A-vrrkn+