THE MICHIGAN DAILY MICHIGAN DAIL _. -- ,i , ""7.- Y among contemporaries. More than one Michigan student, ready to fight for his life and home, has expressed himself as absolutely unwilling to par- ticipate in a foreign war, no matter what the principle. The whole discussion can well be taken to heart by politicians and statesmen. The knowledge that the men who will be called upon to fight their wars, have developed a resistance to the "fife and drum," cannot help but make the legis- lators temporize their actions. How strong this re- sistance is cannot be estimated. The fact that it has developed is a new triumph for intelligence. do good. Less editorial invective is also debatable. For warm-blooded youth any sin is a cardinal sin and any wrong is to be inveighed against loudly. Courteous treatment of an opposing point of view might render campus life more agree- able, but righteous anger is, after all, a generous fault. Concentration on "long time" plans for the improvement of Alma Mater instead of on ephe-± mereal issues is again a matter of policy. Much more serious is the inquiry committee's charge that Spectator let its news report be tinged with editorial comment and in other ways "gave a picture of events not in accord with facts." These are not the generous faults of youth. This is only callow youth imitating the practices of debased journalism in the outside world. -New York Times Scree.Reeios xrwv s r... __- _- I. Musical Events _ ._.. 'ublished every morning except Monday during the iversity year and Summer Session by the Board in itrol of Student Publications. eImber of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- n and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and the local news >lished herein. All rights of republication of special patches are reserved. nteredl at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as and class matter. Special.rate of postage granted by rd Assistant Postmaster-General. ubscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mall, i0. During regular school year by carrier., *4.00; by 1, $4.50. Ifices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, a Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. epresentatives: College Publications Representatives, 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City: 80 iston Street, Boston; G12 North Michigan Avenue, cago. II We Invite thePublic t ii Our Pant-- In order that the public might know and understand what we are doing to bring employ- ment to Ann Arbor people. By ViSiting our plant you will learn that ,7o people are kept on full time and overtime i As w r Ail] 4 if EDITORIAL STAFF -Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR............FRANK B. GILBRETH CITY EDITOR...............,.......KARL SEIFFERT SPORTS EDITOR..... ........JOHN W.t THOMAS- WOMEN'S EDITOR.... . ..MARGARET O'BRIEN ASISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR.......MIRIAM CARVER NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, John W. Pritchard, Joseph A. Reninan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Gletin R. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: L. Ross ain, Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman, Marmon Wolfe. REPORTERS: Charles Baird, A. Ellis ;Ball, Charles 0. l~arodt, Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter, Willam G. Ferris, Sicney Frankel, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hewett, George M. Holmes, Edwin W. Richardson, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Barbara Bates, Marjorie E. Beck, Eleanor B. Blum, Ellen Jane Cooley, Louise Crandall, Dorothy Dishman, Jeanette Duff, Carol J. Hanan, Lois Jotter, Helen Levi- son, Marle J. Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan, Marjorie Western. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER..............BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER................... HARRY BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGR......DONNA BECKER DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; Advertising Contracts, OrvU Aronson; Advertising Serv- Ice, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- culation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. ASSISTANTS: John Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Allen Cleve- land, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph llive, Allen- Knuusi, Russell Read, Fred Rogers, Lester Skinner, Jos3eph Sudow, Robert Ward. Elizabeth Alglier, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris Gimmny, Billy (rifliths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried, Virginia McComb. TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1933 A nualSuabble. .. T HE STUDENT COUNCIL is having its annual spring squabble over a new constitution. The situation came to a head when a certain faction of the Council drew up a few amendments which would prevent the group from being a self-perpetuating body of campus politicians. "Fighting for student self- government," those opposed to the plan resur- rected an old constitution which has been col- lecting dust in the hands of a committee of the University Council since last spring, and they arc now putting all their efforts toward getting this plan accepted. The result is that there is a stale- mate in the Council. The University Council committee now faces a dilemma. Two plans which are diametrically op- posed come from within the Student Council. If the councilmen cannot decide upon which is the better plan to run their organization, certainly the committee which is now considering the plans is in no position to judge which plan the stu- dents favor. The only fair way to settle the ques- tion is to let the students vote on it.l It is quite possible, however, that the studentsj of the University of Michigan are not interested1 in student government and are quite contented to let the administration run things the way they please. There ought to be a stipulation in the proposed election, therefore, that, unless a certain percentage of the students vote, the happy days of Council tea parties come to an abrupt, but just, end. There is no reason why a Council which does not represent student opinion should be allowed to spend $800-$1,500 before the depression-of the University's money a year. SCHOOL OF MUSIC TRIO SUNDAY AFTERNOON Characteristic in their own way and yet very different as to their fundamental principles were the two modern composers, Pizzetti, the Italian, and Andreae, the Swiss, who were presented by the School of Music Trio in a recital Sunday afternoon. The first, the youngest of the con- temporary Italian school, carries on the Respighi convention of transparent, clear harmonies and lack of diatonic feeling that has become tradi- tional in this movement, and his melodic lines are made up of bits and fragments of thematic material, giving his music the shifting, incohe- rent attractiveness that is becoming characteristic of so much of our present music. If that were all, Pizzetti would be lost among the ranks of the mediocre-but it is rather through his rhythmic polyphony that he has made his contribution to modern art. The vigor and variety of his metrical structures have lent his music a vitality that will make it live as representative of an age-our age. And this Trio in A is no excep- tion. Particularly interesting was the last move- ment, Rhapsodio di Settembre, that had all the clear, cold thinness of an autumn day with its invigorating wine like exhileration. Andreae, who is at present the director of the Conservatory at Zurich, has written both symphonies and an opera, but he has become known for his chamber music in particular. Har- monically based on the late Brahms, it is dis- tinctly melodic with themes consisting of whole sentences or paragraphs rather than being built up piecemeal, a word at a time. Consequently, this trio in E flat major has a sweep and ap- parency that was lacking in the Pizetti-as mu- sicians say, "it sounds." That this is charac- teristic of the romantic school rather than the typically "modern" is only the more interesting -perhaps it goes with the tip tilted hats and leg of mutton sleeves in our general return to sentimentality. The members of the Trio are to be all the more congratulated on their program because of the works made upon them. Sometimes one wonders if the involved technical surface of modern art is not to great a price to pay for the little con- tent which lies beneath it, when there is so little opportunity in Ann Arbor to hear any modern music at all, the very fact that these works are contemporary makes them significant aside from any question of their relative intrinsic value. -Kathleen Murphy dito rial Commnt Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keel) away fromn it. AT THE MICHIGAN * ***f "TOPAZE" Auguste Topaze ........ John Barrymore Philippe ................ Reginald Owen Coco...................Myrna Loy Charlemagne ............. Jackie Searle Dr. Bomb ................. Luis Alberni Dr. Stegg ................Frank Reicher Madame Latour .......Jobyna Howland Henri .................... Albert Conti "Topaze" tells the story of a foggy, bearded lycee instructor who undergoes a transformation and becomes a suave super-double-crosser after he is at first duped into backing "Sparkling To- paze," a popular drink, with his scientfic repu- tation. A cast which is peculiarly well adapted to its job of projecting successfully this satire of the trust- ing side of humanity was chosen. It consists of: John Barrymore as Topaze: Tormented by his unruly class, and in particular by Latour's impish son, obsessed with a desire to win the coveted laurels of a certain distinguished French academy of science, striving pitifully to imbue in his pupils the simple principles of honesty, good, and pur- suit of the simple life, dazed by his first success as the soul of "Sparkling Topaze"; then overnight blooming into a sly, well-dressed rogue who out- wits Philippe at his own game of blackmail, and finally steals his mistress- Myrna Loy as Coco-lovely as ever (in a straight role this time) in her representation of Coco- Reginald Owen as Philippe-second only to Barrymore for his fine work as the scamp who defrauds the French educators with his mineral waters, teeming with all kinds of bacteria-- Luis Alberni as Dr. Bomb-the dynamic char- latan who weaves in and out of the picture as friend and enemy to the cause of "Sparkling To- paze"_- Jackie Searle as Charlemagne-the pampered, overwise, brattish son of Mme. and M. Latour, receiver of zeros in chemistry, geography and his- tory. You will pity Topaze's futile teaching efforts, love him for his lack of sophistication (until the great change takes place), share his dismay when he sees himself as a fraud, delight in his new self. You'll hate Charlemagne Latour, think Coco beautiful, shreik at Dr. Bomb, enjoy the rabbitty Philippe, and think Dr. Stegg quite the villain he is. Added attractions: Zipper Paul (Double- breasted) Tompkins at the Barton organ in a program of theme songs taken from screen suc- cesses, good; Charley Chase comedy of a young clerk who took everything literally, excellent; Paramount News. --G. MI W. Jr. work, producing magazines and publications that come to us from all over the United States. . They are all American citizens earning their living honestly and that American citizenship and ability to hold their pirticular jobs is all that is required to find employ- ment in our plant. We favor no Racket. ANN ARBOR PRESS A. J. WILTSE, Mgr. IT'S SIMPLE. just call Al the Ad-Taker at 2-1214 and tell him what you want. he'll help you arrange your ad . ..and the cost is surprisingly low. 'V , Y IY I 1111 I II IIY0 11 I II . - - -I An International Pacifst Development. YOUTH SHOULD CONSIDER WAR QUESTIONS Whether the increasing diplomatic tension in Europe will lead, as Prof. Grayson Kirk fears, to international conflict is a question which should receive the serious attention of the youth of the world. We are all too apt to live our little lives without any great concern over the dangers which al- though seemingly remote are ultimately most real. War is just one of those possibilities upon which the sensitive human mind does not like to dwell. But, no one has ever solved a problem by for- getting it. When Prof. Kirk notes that lack of finances is the only real obstacle in the way of a major war, he is thereby showing how thin is the thread that keeps us from disaster. He is also posing the question, What is youth's answer to the war danger? That is the problem of our generation. Never can it take up too much of our attention. International friction, just as domestic malad- justment, will always be with us. The question is not whether there is or will be strife between groups, but whether that strife is expressed in the form of armed hostilities. There is no sane reason for war. All disputes can be settled peaceably. Moreover, all must be settled in that fashion if our civilization is to survive. Now is the time, apparently, for the growth of knowledge of international government and its possibility in this distracted world, war is an in- sult to the college youth of the world. Now is the time certainly for definite expression of stu- dent opinion. When the guns begin to fire it will be too late. -Daily Cardinal RUGGED INDIVIDUALISM John O'Brien, graduate of the University ofI Minnesota, author of short stories, member of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition, and holder of a Con- gressional Medal of Honor, was picked up on a park bench the other day by a newspaper friend who happened by and recognized him. Mr. O'Brien was penniless, hungry and cold and he had received only five dollars from the pawnshop for his Congressional Medal. George Herman Ruth, a fat, good-natured fel- low who slugs baseballs and runs around dia- monds, is basking in the warm Florida sun, sign- ing his illustrious name on shiny new balls, and complaining bitterly against the meagre sum ($50,000) which is being offered for his services. -Columbia Spectator TRUTH JUSTIFIES VIOLENCE The Columhia Snaratatnr haoo iiit maimAti STARS == &STRIPES . . DO YOU USE.h E-G 1 *N T HIS HOUSE will in no circum- stances fight for its king and country." Such was the resolution passed by the Oxford Union Society at Oxford University last week. It was the expression of extreme pacifists belonging to a generation which has had the hor- ror and fruitlessness of war indelibly impressed upon it. As might be expected, the conservative English press voiced its indignation; the radical papers jeeringly condoned the act. The Oxford Union Society is an undergraduate student body. Investigation last week seemed to show otherwise. It became fairly well established that a large number of the students ignored the grollp. Furthermore, it was pointed out that the body might easily fall under the control of a radical clique. To cap the climax, 30 well-muscled Oxfordians, hearing of the resolution, invaded the Union in full session and tore its resolution from the books. The pacifists in accordance with their doctrines sat serenely watching. Again it is a matter of conjecture just how well student opinion was rep- resented. The resolution at any rate was not affected. - As a merp nrentationo f fact. then the ac- By Karl Seiffert- Gand Rapids, (Mich.) Dear Mr. Seefert, Inclose find poem which we have wrote for your're column specially, it is a speical spring poem, to be printed in the -column on Tuesday, March 21, which day as you may have forgot is the inauguration of the spring solistice! POEM FOR MARCH 21st Now I know spring has come With biologic alarms, For every girl that I see I want to hold in my arms. Let the old fogies laugh In their thin, withered cackles Thank God, I'm still stirred By the sight of slim ackles. --The Doctors Whoofle I P. S. Ackles is an old variant of ankles, and you can print word as "ankles" if desirable, though it doesn't make NO difference.-Drs. W. Ankles or ackles, it's all one to us, but here is something to study in your idle moments, Drs. Whoofle, when Grand Rapids gets to be TOO Much and you get tired of each other's company. THE WEATHER Probably sleet or snow today; continued cold, with lowest temperature about 25 to 30 degrees. Yaaaaaa to you and your sliw ackles, Drs. Whoofle. Production in some English factories has been speeded up by-the introduction of radio concerts for workers, according to a writer. The trouble is that no matter how much racket you make you can't drown out a lot of the new models. Just as there are-many keys, but only one which fits your door, there are many adver- ertising mediums . but only one which really fits the student market in Ann Arbor. Wise merchants realize this. . . and adver- tise their products in The Michigan Daily. . : MICHIGAN DAILY ADVERTISING III i I