THE MICHIGAN DAILY I'ublished every morning except MVonday during the University year by the Board in Control o iStnt 1'bl>licatio>s. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- publication of all news d isatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published hehein. Entered 'at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant rostmaster General; Stibscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50 Ofices eAnn ArboriT I ressuilding, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, 1\ichigan. Phonesi: l'ditoriAl,'1925; Business, 21214. EDITGRIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR FRANK B. GILBRETH CITY E TITOR........... ................KAR S1 1FFERT Sports fEditor ..,...... ..........................john W \. 7Thotnas WJomen's Editor............................Al argare t 0' I rien Assistant women's Editor........................,ie Feldman Telegraph Editor ...........................(Georg A. Stamter nine. Each is independent of the other and of the Federal government." "The manufacturing liquor trade wanted a new and legal retail marketing agency; one that would be safe, reliable, efficient, respectable. They it was who conceived the idea of having the government act as their selling agents." "It cannot be too strongly emphasized that the change from limited prohibition in Canada to the present system of liquor sale was brought about pri-I marily by the activities of the brewers and distillersI who wanted a wider market for their products, aided by drinkers who wanted freer and legal facilities for obtaining liquor." "Despite all specious pleas, all plausible reason- ing, the stern fact remains that the consumption of liquor in Canada has doubled during the last seven years and is today not only larger in the aggregate but the per capita consumption is also greater than{ in any previous period in the nation's history with a possible exception of the two pre-war years of 1913 and 1914. "Throughout the country at large, however, the, Music and Drama MARTHA GRAHAM, ARTIST An Appreciation. j By Robert Henderson. Martha Graham, in my own per- sonal experience, is quite the DIAGONAL The Cow Boy's Lament. Laugh, Clown. Precocious Racketeer. By Barton Kane i JEAN GOLDKETTE'S ISLAND LAKE D *NIGHTLY Dancin-g EXCEPT MONDAY ANN ARBOR NITE EVERY FRIDAY MANY VALUABLE GIFTS PRESENTED TO THE HOLDERS OF THE LUCKY NUMBERS. greatest artist I have ever worked Occasionally a man is found on with. It is my opinion that she is the faculty with a sense of humor. on a straighter track, that she Recently, on a Spanish blue book, THINKS straighter, that she has a a certain student from Montana who believed that if he failed his more brilliant future in America. examination he would flunk the It is my personal belief that, where- course and consequently be dropped as today she is the leading dancer from college, wrote the following in this country, in three or four sentence: "If I flunk this exam I years she will be recognized as one will be a cow boy for the rest of my life." .I. 1l: John W. Pritchard Brackley Shaw Fred A. Huber stanley W. Arnheim E~dward Andrews Hlyman J. Arrn~dam A. Ellis Ball Charles C(,Harndt {anes Banchat onaldR. Bird Donald F. Blankertz Willard 9 Blaser Charles It. Brwnson C. Garrl unting Arthur W. Carstens Jessie L. Barton Mleanor 1B. lum Jane U. Brucker] Miriam Carver B~eatrice Collins Marys J oinan Louise Crandall Mary Mv. Duggan NIGHT EDITORS Glenn R. Winters ThI om a ' Connellan C. lIart Schaaf Sports Assistants Roland Al art in REPORTERS Theodore 1K. Cohen Rob l rt 5. 1 himI 'ce 1) i~ir .a h ldr- lbiulnrtt i ogel AI rod(ros Eric Hall1 Itohn C. leley lolw-rt I. IIewett Al. B. ll1minM Prd emce foster A lice il>ert a:rol ,. Ianuian .!'litrese T.', Heiman M' lesIdaneliester Al arie . etger BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 d.i i ,.j i f fk.,.frvpm.nr . rnv nrc ofni' i r , , 1 t f a l I , 't s , * -iv, . , ; ' { (. Joseph W. Renihan ,. Jerome Pettit Albert Newman Alex nder ii irsc'lfeld Walterl?. :Morrison Warld 1), Alurton klml re: i1t Tyon 1 brn:rd I . Good I onmila Becker kl iiue :Gisclmgrund im al lmeyer Ka theriioJackson Ioirothiy : maylin Iiririia MlcCrornh Cairoline NMosher 11 en Olson 11clen Schimude May Seefried He en Spencer Kathryn Spencer lKi ryn Stork Clare Unger MIaryElizabeth W uNi Oh' LnbF o e - 1* Night Editor-JOSEPH A. RENIHAN atts - FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1932 A New Leadership Especially when the end of the semester looms menacingly ahead and work piles up on every side, does the "library complex" develop. No course, these gentlemen feel, could possible be complete without a term report. Supplementary reading also is speed- ed up in some cases to an astonishing figure. One professor has thus far assigned 10 complete books to be read and reported upon for his three-hour class in addition to liberal doses from the textbook. The plight of some unfortunate who chanced toG be taking five courses from an instructor of such ambitions can easily be imagined. The gravity of the situation is recalled by the fate of the old pro- fessor in the introduction of Anatole France's "Pen- quin Island" who was suddenly engulfed and uncere- moniously smothered in an avalanche of his assem- bled data on everything under the sun. The value of supplementary reading can scarcely be overemphasized but an enlarged perspective on the part of sometprofessors in prescribing the medi- cine would sometimes bring much more effective re- sults. Too often the prospect is so alarming that the student gives up the whole affair in disgust, andI ( importance Martha Graham saw was Ruth St. Denis. Martha Gra- ham was still in school and had never studied dancing. Against the wishes of her father, who did not approve of dancing, she went to Los Angeles to study with Miss St.s Denis and stayed with her six weeks. At the end of that time she returned to school to please her father, and it was two years before she danced again. In 1919 Martha Graham went back to the Denishawns as a stud- ent teacher. She stayed with .them, alternating as soloist in their con- cert companies during the winter! and as teacher in their school in the summer, until 1923. She was, with the Denishawn company that went to England in 1923. After she left the Denishawns she taught for two years at the Eastman School of EVEN a cursory consideration of the national scene will reveal that at least one of the rea- sons for the prolongation of our presentgenerally depressed condition is the absence of really able leaders. In view of the fact that our contemporary America has produced so many eminently capable men-Edisons and Rockefellers and Carnegies,- who have known so well the secret of leadership in their own fields, we may wonder why we have today apparently no one who can cope with the situation. The reason, it seems to us, lies in the country's social viewpoint. Specialization is the order of the day, and specialization is frequently but a euphernism for growing inwardly. The young man of recent times who would be a 'success' is con- fronted with the necessity of learning thoroughly the field of his choice. He most for a number of years direct his gaze away from all objects and individuals that do not have some bearing on the business he is learning of building. We do not regret this state of affairs; if we are to have the Edisons, we must have it; and we cer- tainly do not propose doing away with the Edisons. We submit, however, that statesmanship has other requirements. We believe that to be a states- man-a good statesman, that is,-a man must have a broad outlook, a viewpoint that integrates, and must be, if you will, the product of growing out- wardly. What we lament in our society is its tendency to believe that because a man is able in a particu- lar field he will also make an able statesman. What we lament in our society is its proneness to put at the helm of its state men who, however success- ful they may have been as bankers or doctors, may not and usually are not expert political mariners. And by way of evidence to support our proposition we point to the sad way in which we have for so long been foundering in shoals that far-sighted statesmanship might have prevented our ever reaching. Our University exists to prepare us, among other things, for future citizenship. .We urge that it point out, at least in its courses in history and political science, the vast difference that exists between ordinary specialization, which is growing inwardly, and statesmanship, which is the product of growing outwardly. where this does not occur the top-heavy library bur- Music in Rochester. She was also" den usually results in haphazardly prepared work in starred in three editions of "The every branch at a time when solid, concentrated Greenwich Village Follies."' study is most urgently needed. In April, 1926, Martha Graham gave her first New York recital, and The Liberal University ; at that time she began to build the allu .- V11 ...A 4 ,- y s1.LI! U 0 1n, "Here I am." His fears were un- founded. They finally found him. The Glee club went out and sere- naded the co-eds Wednesday night in spite of the rain. The president, according to tradition, was made to call every sorority house by tele- phone before the club appeared so I that the girls would be expecting the singers. The answers he re- ceived were varied. One girl said that it was a hell of a night to call as shehad a thesis to hand in thej next day. A house mother at a so- rority informed the girls that, if the Glee club was crazy enough tor call on a night when it was rain- ing, the girls should not be crazy enough to stay up for them. At any rate, the Glee club receiv- ed a fairly good reception even if they did get their white flannels dirty. The circus was in town the other day. A certain clown who was rid- ing a mule in the parade up State street seemed to be the butt of a good many jokes from students re- turning home froxi 11 o'clock class-I es. Finally the man's temper got' the best of him. He informed all students within hearing t h a t damned soon they would be out of college and would be just damned lucky if they could obtain a job that paid as well as his did. * * * One of the favorite stunts of the more playful students of the cam- pus is to telephone some friend when he is out and leave a message for him to call 7721 and ask for Joe. 7721 happens to be the phone num- ber of Joseph A. Bursley. Dean Bursley informs students that call him in this manner that Joe is out -AFTER THE SENIOR BALL Or any night this week-end dine inexpensively and DANCE TO THE LILTING TUNES of BENSON'S SEREN44DERS (CROONING BY "WINDY" MEYERS TH E Main Streets' Only Night Club Meals at Current Low Prices-Chop Suey, Steak Dinners NO COVER CHARGE DANCING 10 (?) i~~~~ zHT.SELAA Our Guarantee of Ultra -Protection Given Each Bottle of Ann Arbor Dairy (Daily Illini) A university which is truly liberal teaches stu- dents to think. It makes them alert intellectually, and graduates them mature and conscious individu- als into a new, interesting and intricate life. We desire to see the university continue the ad- vance it has recently begun, so that some day it may attain.to its particular fullness in the liberal ideal of an institution of higher instruction. It will have to avoid the form of a purely Utopian university which might place no limitation on the number of courses under instruction. Excesses of this nature in the ideal might finally expose it to utter failure. Conse- quently, the university must check the growth of such flaws by an intelligent reaction which will dis-, perse weaknesses in student application, mind andl utilize knowledge resources, and cut away the catar- act which obscures student intellect. Our new study-freedom weighted by its implied and defined responsibilities will eliminate those who reputation and vthe position she now occupies. Discarding all she had learned and practiced during her years with the Denishawns, she started anew with her dancing. As a young modern she felt that what she had been doing was artificial and out of sympathy with the time in which she was living. Move- ment, which, she felt, was the very essence of the dance, had been sacrificed to theatricalness. She struggled for economy of expres- sion, for simplification and for di- rectness. In her work Martha Gra- ham has been greatly influenced by the simple power of the dances of the Indians of our Southwest. Their lack of self consciousness, and their concentration on their dance as a Il GOLDEN JERSEY MILK In addition to the number of rigid tests for purity and richness, we employ still another measure of protection -A PATENTED SEAL.-KAP. This cap makes it impossible for any particle of dirt or dust to accumulate on the lip of the bottle. Absolute cleanliness is guar- anteed. have an innate lack of intelligence, those who are ritual, and not as a theatrical per- at t ty can see nim on te slothful in mental effort, and those who are indif- formance, makes it, paraodoxically, following day in room 2, University ferent to their studies. The university must next a theatrically moving thing in this iHall. reach out and influence education in secondary age of superficial expression. It is And the favorite telephone stunt schools so that the mass production of high school to bring to the concert stage the of a certain girl in Mosher hall is graduates who are imitators, mental dwarfs, owners primitive beauty of this simplicity to call a sorority house and ask for of dormant intellects and fact gourmands may be that Martha Graham strives. ! Virgin. Of course she is told that ended. Because she has at last achieved there is no Virgin there, and then- The university ought to rid itself ,of its flabby this simplicity Of movement - a well, she has her little joke. scholars, and take instead critical scholars who teach simplicity which Stark Young, re- * the student to ask and to answer not so much what ,viewing her first recital of the pres- A certain practical minded high but why. ent season, compares to the draw- school student of this city recently ling of Diego Rivera-that Martha decided to put his knowledge of DELIRIUM OR "DOUGH?" Graham has been critized as angu- printing to use. He made up in the (Daily Illini) lar in her movement. This "Angu- school's print shop, a letterhead for It's sad, but it's true-every man at Columbia larity" is only apparent and not an Indiana corporation with a university would rather have a million dollars than actual; it appears because her faultless Bradstreet rating and a perfect love affair. But the romantic co-eds, 92 1 movements are arrested and one then wrote thereon a letter to a per cent of them, voted for the moonlight and roses. I sees only the segment of a -circle m local automobile distributor in- But at the University of Wisconsin, the girls are more instead of the completed curve; structing them to furnish him, their cynical than the men, it seems, for eight out of 20 the climax must take place in the representative, with an automobile men voted for love, and only five girls out of 20 did. mind of the audience. during his stay in Ann Arbor. He One crafty girl, however, says that if she could This winter Martha Graham has signed the letter with the name of have a perfect love affair, she could earn a million achieved an extraordinary success the president of the Indiana firm. dollars writing about this unique experience. fin New York and the East. She at- mailed it and a few days later call- Other answers varied considerably. One man tained further distinction by being ed for the car. student said, in justifying his avarice, "I've never awarded the John Simon Guggen- For one delightful week he had had a million dollars." Another said, "I believe in heim Memorial Fellowship f o r the car at his disposal, and then, prevention of cruelty to animals. Give me a million study this summner of name forma when no check appeared, the deal- dollars and I'd go wrong. Give me a perfect love and materials in Mexico and Yuca- er became suspicious, wrote to the affair and what a life for the poor girl. Either way tan. With Miss Graham, as her firm and discovered the deception. you loo'k at it, someone is going to get it in the neck. pianist and artistic advisor, comes He recovered the car and, finding it So being a humanitarian, I say, let me suffer; give Louis Horst, generally regarded as still in good condition, decided to Ann Arbor Dairy Co. -- ---------- Beautiful Flowers What the sick! What aearty! comfort they bri-I to cheer to the hale and CAMPUS OPRNRON Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing theediorial opinion of Time Daiy. Anonymous com- n1ica tionI S vvi II.' ~dis;rega14red. Thei-eacs of conulunicants will, however, he regarded as c ouidential rpon request. Cotrib- utors a e asked to le brief, confining themselves to less than Soo wordsif possible. 10 THE EDITOR Mr. Ben H. Spence, a Toronto journalist who is an active worker for the World League Against Al- coholism has a long article in "The International Student" 'for March a few excernts of which are, What radiance to the home When you "Say it with Flowers" you express your sentiments in the most fitting, refined, tasteful manner possible. 111 11