" TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1932. iv_- I-- op , - .- I 1 I 1 11 - -- -- W"m Published every morning except Monday during the University ear by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively (entitled to the use for re- ublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise redited in this paper and the local news published hehein. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second lass matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant 'ostmaster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50 Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Lchlgan. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR FRANK B. GILBRETH ITY EiTOR........................ KARL SaFERT ports -ditor...................... ...John NV.. Th4omas /omen's Editor. ................ ........Margaret O'Brien ssistant \omen's Editor.............. .......Elsie Feldman clegraph Editor..........................(;eor~ge A. Stauter Somewhere along the line they have allowed some- body to take a lot of fun out of their singing. Missj Higbee and staff have perfected their intonation and their enunciation and balanced the choirs. But, asI the sound of the words suggests, those things are not what one expects of children. As the children appear in the Festivals there is very little delight evident. There is a prevailing mildness and some- what dull correctness which is incongruous. As a matter of fact in the Gilbert and Sullivan pieces !which they sang the kind of mild, fastidious 'enuncia- tion .which the children gave was definitely wrong as interpretation. There are buoyant conversational inflections in all this music which the children did not render and which they could, I am sure, rendera delightfully. And again, I am sure many have desired with me to hear just how much volume four hundred children are capable of. Yet, "When the Foeman Bares His Steel" was very carefully sung, and onej was thwarted. My intention is not to minimize the importance of Miss Higbee's efforts to make the! children sing corectly. Enthusiasm and vitality, how- ever, seem to be stifled. Mina Hager contributed to the afternoon some very pleasant singing. She seemed a little embar- rassed in the style of eighteenth century oratorio butt one was glad to hear an unfamiliar aria, "Salve1 Regina' by Pergolesi. The songs by John AldenI Carpenter she sang very delightfully and in her encore, an unfamiliar aria by Rossini from "La Cev-t erentola," she displayed her talents to real advantage. W.J.G. FOURTH FESTIVAL CONCERTt A Review , a Beniamino Gigli was in rare form. In rare form i1 DIAGONAL Diagrammed Picnics. Prima Donna Ham -erlocks. The Museum's Flutist. By Barton Kane PULLEN'S CAFETERIA SERVES A SPECIAL WEEKDAY LUNCH MEAT POTATOES ROLL OR BREAD AND BUTTER SALAD OR VEGETABLE TEA, COFFEE OR MILK 216 South 4th Ave. J I Lost' usefthe CLASSIFIED IF I4 Ii 117South Main Street Sale of NEW SILK John W. Pritchard Brackley Shaw Fred A. lluber stanley W. Arnheim Edward Andrews Hyman J. Aronstam A. Ellis Ball Charles G. Barndt James Bauchat Donald R. Bird Donald F. Blankertz Willard E. Blaser Charles B. Brownson C. Garritt Bunting Arthur W. Carstens Jessie L. Barton Eleanor B. Blum Jane H. Brucker AMiriam Carver Beatrice Collins Mary J. Copeman Louise Crandall MDary M. Duggan NIGHT EDITORS Glenn R. Winters Thomas Connelan C. Dart Schaaf Sports Assistants Roland lMartin REPORTERS Theodore K. Cohen Robcrt S. IDeutsch onad El :der Robert Eungel Albert FIriedman Edvward A. Genz Harold Gross Eric hall John C. healey Robert B. Ilewett M. B. Higgins Prudence Foster Alice Gilbert (Carol J. laiana -'herese R. henran Frances M anchester Elizabeth Mann Edith E. Maples Marie Metzger BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 Joseph W. Renihan E. Jerome Pettit I was waiting for an economics class at 10 o'clock yesterday morn- ing, and the sociology professor who had had the class the hour before was explaining to a young lady about a picnic they were going on. The meeting place was subject of some discussion, and it was finally decided to meet at Camden Court. The young lady didn't know wher.c Camden Court was, so the profes- sor drew appropriate diagrams on the board in front of the waiting economics class. Just as he was through our ec instructor walked in. "Oih, oh," he said, "what's going on here?" "0 h nothing," embarrassedly smiled the sociologist, "just a Sun- day night discussion group that I have." WANT ADS PAY! M BA _ Ill. J CALL 2-1214 with LACE Tops Smart Summer Shades First Quality! Vi i RI I, Albert NewNan Alexander H irschfeld Walter E. Morrison Ward D. Morton Robert Ruwitch Alvin Schleifer G. Edwin Sheidrick Robert W. Thorne George Van Vleck Cameron Walker Robert S. Ward Guy M. Whipple, Jr. W. Stoddard White Marie J. Murphy Margaret C. Phalamn Sarah K. Rucker Marion Shepard Beverly Stark Alma Wadsworth Marjorie Western Josephine Wood ham CHARLES T. KLINE ......................Business Manage NORRIS P. JOHNSON..................... Assistant Manage Department Managers !Advertising .. .. ........................ ....Vernon Bishop Advertising Contracts .. ................. . .... Larry R. Begley Advertising Service....................... ......Byron C. Vedder Publications .... ......... ............William T. Brows: Accounts............ .............Richard Stratemeir omen's Business Manager ...................... Ann W. Vernor was he. He sa can quite sing. of wistful bewi ful applause A combination h applause thisy sing-which sin the reviewer, e the perfect Ita and power, un very round tone always so supe always convinc his field intot as several song in concluding success. It is ing like no one who sings like he does The Theta house is not in favor His boyish scampering and moments Iof its guests making a bar out of the His oyih sampringandmomntsmatron's room. At least so it would lderment at all this wonderful wonder- arnfrom m lait ainst appear from a complaint against were executed very well. With that e exnhietedhveyigwel. th such practices which was register- e won himself the biggest volume of ed in one of their recent meetings. year and the opportunity to sing and I seems that two of the gentlemen nging he and everybody else, including guests at their dance last Saturday njoyed. This man, is without doubt night mixed drinks on the bureau alian tenor, glamorous in his energy in the matron's room, which was Lrestrained in rolling and sustaining being used as a men's cloak room.. es, very bold in color and tonal variety, "It wouldn't have been so bad," said erbly confident in his voice as to be one of the girls, "if they had only sing. In addition, he can go out of been careful-but they took all the the lyric and equal any other tenor, varnish off the bureau." gs last night showed. One feels safe that Mr. Gigli's appearance was a * * * F1rhA tlC 1^~~ cafe nnA ---ain-x '- 1 Irvil Aronson Gilbert E. Bursiey Allen Clark R~obert Finn Arthur L Kohn Bernard Schnaekel Grafton W. Sharp Donald A. Johnson, Dean Turner Assistants D~on Lyon Bernard I. Good D~onna Becker laxine Fisch grund Ann Galhneyer Katherine Jackson lorothy I aylin TIiVirginia McCromb Caroline Mosher len Olson l sen Schnde May Seefried Ielen Spencer Nathryn Spencer Kathryn Stork Clare Unger Glary Elizabeth' perhaps less sale, ana cenalmy less S 0 . I N Watts SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1932 Night Editor-JOHN W. PRITCHARD Dr. Stan ley- Un iversity Builder HEN death called Professor Emeritus Stan- ley the University lost one of itsbest-known, best-loved faculty members; Ann Arbor lost one of its greater influences for culture; and the entire student body of Michigan lost a wonderful friend. Not many students of today remember personal contacts with Dr. Stanley-he retired as head of the school of music more than ten years ago. Many faculty members who knew him then still remem- ber the many likeable chaacteristics which marked him at the time however. For then he was wont to poke his ever-present pipe at one in all good humor and reflect his pleasant personality wher- ever he might be. Then he used to show students the proper manner in which the famous ol' locomo- tive should be yelled at a pep gathering; then hel attracted thebflocks of "pipe" seekers to his courses in the theory of music-and made them like it even after discovering that the courses really meant something; then he wrote the music for the plays presented by the senior women, Greek societies, and other organizations. : Now he is remembered by the present campus group because the May Festival which he origin- ated still endures; because his many compositions seem to mellow with the years and are more appreciated all the time; because alumni tell of his wonderful accomplishments. He was one of the city's most loyal sons. An ardent supporter of civic activities, he never missed the meetings of the Rotary club, even when in Vienna. In fact he probably enjoyed its meetings because of its international aspects-he was often on the run between the continent and the United States. To Rotarians he was "Dad" Stanley. His University shall miss him, his many stu- dents shall miss him, every music lover regrets his departure. Dr. Stanley--one of the reasons why Michigan is the University it is today! polite, to note down a reflection the reviewer had while Mr. Gigli was unexpectedly stealing one of the favorite encores of concert pianists and violinists: In the time taken by Mr. Gigli's scampering and 'extra' encores, the needed second perform'ance of the "Symphonie de Psaumes" and perhaps of the "Choral Fantasia,' which Mr. Moore spoke of Thurs- day night, could have occurred. The question is open. Obviously it is one of value. Frederick Stock excellently directed his orchestra, which remains excellent through all its vicissitudes,I in an early Mozart Symphony, Scriabine's "The Divine Poem," Gliere's symphonic poem "The Sirens," and the Strauss "Emperor Waltzes." The Mozart was splendid. The seventeen year old boy frequently worried and occasionally broke the French horn sec- tion. Otherwise the only thing to mention about the Derformance is that Mr. Stock displayed his usual good taste with classical music. Taken in connection with the amazing commentary which he wrote for it, the "Divine Poem" by the 'Palestrina of the Bla-j vatsky religion' seemed only pretentious nonsense.! Taken for itself, it often seemed as interesting as Wagner and often seemed an interesting parody of Wagner. The Gliere symphonic poem seemed very! good of its kind. Johann Strauss? An excellent composer. Intentions clear, execution perfect. j W.J.G. ; I was strolling across campus thc other evening, directly behind Chase Baromeo a nd Frederick Jagel, two of the Festival stars. Hoping to get an earful of what they thought of students, jazz, wo- men, music and Festivals, I listened carefully to the conversation. They were discussing the best holds for wrestling. * * *I I was always a little skeptical about these college men selling this, that, and the other thing, to work their way through college. But it must be true. In yesterday morn- ing's D.O.B. there was a notice about Mr. Blank, of the Fuller Brush company, who would like to interview men for permanent em- ployment. It would, however, be much more interesting to me to work along the lines suggested by the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation in a similar notice yes- terday, such as Mothers' Pensions, Delinquent Juveniles, or Case Work. * * . I might just as well mention, be- fore many people start calling my attention to it, an advertisement yesterday which calls your atten- tLiof to "Pajamas- 2 Off."' I I ...--- , I. lE¢hfIAA COMMENT I" i ;, 1, ! i 11 .r II i AN INDICTMENI' (Indiana Daily Student) 'M[USIScC and IDIAMA I1 I An intimation that the school work of fraternity members suffers because of social competition is con- In case you never knew it, there tained in the report of Prof. Joseph Bursely, dean of is a lake on the campus, right plunk men at the University of Michigan, released in the in the middle of the Natural Sci- annual report of the president of that school. The once building. It feasures approx- report is based on the records of members of five imately six by ten feet, and has . fraternities which were closed at the beginning of rather leaky rowboat drawn up on the second semester after police raids disclosed the ;shore. presence of intoxicating liquors. It A compilation of grades for the five closed frater- No wonder people don't like to nities was made for the first semester when the men live in the Law club. The truth were living together and for the second semester leaked out yesterday about women when they were living separately outside the house.:visitors to the club. It seems that In every instance the scholastic standing was mater- last year the law students were al- ially better when members were living separately latea the wsments er al-m outside their fraternities than when they were living lowed to have women in their rooms in their respective organization houses. rom 2 to 5 o'clock, on Sunday aft- in .r e oernoons, but, whoever it is that "Fraternities," said Dean Bursely, "when function- makes a practice or checking up on ing in acordance with their ideals as set forth in the morals of lawyers, decided that their constitutions and rituals, are a tremendous this would have to stop. As is cus- asset to the university, but they should so regulate tomary in such circumstances, it their houses that it would not be more difficult for did stop. their members to do their best work while living in This year the rooms on the first! them rather than when living outside." floor that face toward the inner This statement of Dan Bursely is a challenge to court are in reat demand. They're all fraternities which are losing sight of the fact that more neiengrt their existence is harbored in the well-being of the university at which they are located, and that their ** members are supposedly attending the university to Someone, I can't find out who, equip themselves with an education which is to practices a flute in the Museum al-! better prepare them for a life occupation. most every night sometime after 121 In failing to provide proper conditions and the o'clock. The practice consists in incentive for its members to realize substantial and the most part of running up and! worthwhile educational gains, as well as certain down the scale, and, with all due social benefits, a fraternity is neglecting one of its respects to the musician, he is not. fundamental raisons d'etre. Failure of the organiza- very accomplished. tions to meet this obligation has led to the formation Two explanations seem to present of honorary organizations which seek to promote themselves. First, that the flutist! high scholarship and recognize those students who is the night watchman. Second, attain it. They have literally taken over the unful- !that he is some curator whose wife filled purpose of the social fraternities. will not allow him to play at home. It is pure folly for a fraternity or sorority group to flatter itself by believing that in attaining a make-' believe and unsubstantial high "social" standard, it I was swimming the other day, is satisfying its reason of existence, thereby neglect- and stopped to watch a student, ap- ing its reason of existence, thereby neglecting the all- parently in his first year on cam- FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Frederick B. Fisher Peter F. Stair Ministers 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. "SEEING IS BELIEVING" Dr. Stair 8:00 P. M.-Union Serivce at the Congregation Church in behalf of World Peace. HILLEL FOUNDATION Cor. East University Ave. & Oakland Rabbi Bernard Heller, Director Philip Bernstein, Assistant to the Director Sunday, May 22nd 1932 11:15 A. M.-Services in the Chapel of the Women's League Bldg. Rabbi Max Artz of Scranton, Pa. will speak on, "The Religion that Nobody Knows." 8:00 P. M.-Open Forum at Nat- ural Science Auditorium, "The Question of Reparations." Speak- ers: Professors Slosson, Pollock, and Watkins. 12:00 M,- Jesus" -Class: "The Aim ofI i THE WESLEY FOUNDATION State and Huron Streets WESLEY HALL E. W. Blakeman, Director Sunday, May 22nd, 1932 6:00 P. M.-Student Guild. Dr. J. A. Halmhuber, District Superin- tendent, will speak concerning the General Conference at Atlantic City, l" THIRD FESTIVAL CONCERT A Review It was very clear after only a few minutes yester- day afternoon that Bach and the performers were contributing something quite solid and incontrovert- ible to the Festival. The Brandenburg Concertos, Schweitzer assures us, represent "the purest productI of Bach's polphonic style." At least in the Fifth, as in others, the agility and absolute sureness of what might as well be called Bach's musical intelligence are evident to perfection. The performance was quite good enough. To some extent the first movement was spoiled by a serious mistake in acoustical tactics. There was enough indication when one heard the piano that Mr. Brinkman was playing his highly figured lines with the requisite sharpness and preci- sion. But with the top down, those lines often came out blurred and often, for the reviewer in a central seat in the first gallery, not at all. In the lovely slow movement, Mr. Brinkman had a tendency to do too much 'phrasing'- indulging slight retards and ac- ST. PAUL'S LUTHERN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty St. C. A. Brauer, Pastor Trinity Sunday 9:30 A. M.-Sunday School. 9:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," 6:00 P. M.-Senior and Alumni banquet at the church. Sponsored by Student Club. ZION LUTHERN CHURCH Washington Street and 5th Ave. E. C. Stellhorn, Pastor 9:00 A. M.--Sunday School Lesson topic: "The Spirit of Reconcilia- tion.' FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division Sts. Merle H. Anderson. Minister Alfred Lee Klaer, AssociateMinister 9:30 A. M.-Bible Study Class for Freshmen Students at the Church House. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "Seeing Through Diffi- culties." 12:00 M.--Discussion group for up- perclassmen on ethical issues in current events. 5:30 P. M.-Social Hotmr for Young People. 6:30 P. M.-installation of new officers for the year 1932-33. TE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCI E. Huron, below Stat, R. Edward Sayles, Ministtr Howard R. Chapmain, MinIster for Students. 9:30 A. M.-Church School. Dr. Albert J. Logan, Supcrintntdent. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Mr. Sayles will preach on Tifse's Inner Resources." 12 M.----Stde nt study grou; .;t the Guid House. Mr. Clah aan. 5:30 P. M.-Student Frientdship Hour. 6:30 P. M.-Professor W. Carl Rufus will speak on"Towards An Oriental Point of View." FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A. M.-Regular Morning Serv- ice. Sermon topic: "Soul and Body." 11:45 A. M.-Sundav SrhonT folow. Conservative services evening, 7:30 P. M., dation. each Friday at the Foun- BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH South Fourth Avenue Theodore R. Schmale, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. 10:00 A. M.-Mornini Worshin.