_THE MICHIGAN DAILY .CHIGAN DAILY j ij would be; we endeavor below to describe this ma- chinery. The distrust, to what degree it has existed, has been quite natural; fraternities on this campus have always been suspicious of paternalism, and it is to be expected that they will be reluctant ; at present to vote for the adoption of rules per- taining to matters they have hitherto taken n care of without any outside interference. The proposed requirements would be enforced as follows: The dean's office would serve as a clearing house where the individual fraternity's compli- Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by .the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news puiblished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmnaster -eneral. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mall, $450. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone 2-1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street. Boston 612 North MichiganwAvenue. Chicago. National Avertiing Service, inc., 11 West 42nd St., New York, N. Y. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR..........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR.............C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR................. ...BRACKLy SHAW SPORTS EDITOR................ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR...................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: Ralph G. Coulter, William G. Ferris, John C. Healey Robert B. Hewett, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret Phalan. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Marjorie Western. REPORTERS: Caspar S. Early, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Manuel Levin, Irving F. Levitt, David G. Macdonald, S. Proctor McGeachy, John O'Connell, George 1. Quimby, Floyd Rabe. Mitchell Raskin, Richard Rome, Adolph Shapiro Marshall D. Silverman, L. Wilson Trimmer, William F. Weeks. Marjorie Beck, Frances Carney, Dorothy Gies, Jean Han- mer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, Margaret Hiscock, Eleanor Johnson, Hilda Laine, Kathleen Macntyre, Josephine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Mary O'Neill, Jane Schneider, Ruth Sonnanstine, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER................BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER..................HARRY R. BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......Donna C. Becker DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, W. Grafton Sharp Advertising Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ice, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- culation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Finn. ASSISTANTS: John Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Allen Cleve- land, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Robert Ward, Meigs W. Bartmess, William B. Caplan, Willard Cohodlas, R. C. Devereaux, Carl J. Fibiger, Albert Gregory, Milton Kramer, JohnMarks, John I. Mason, John P. Ogden, Robert Trimby, Bernard Rosenthal, Joseph Rothbard, Richard Schiff, George R. Williams. Elizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris GImmy, Billie Griffiths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried, Virginia McComb. Meria Abbot, Betty Chapman, Lillain Fine, Minna Giffen, Cecile Poor, Carolyn Wose. WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1933 More Student League Petitions-. . T HE National Student League cur- rently offers for signatures a peti- tion which we believe to be rather absurd. It re- veals that the league members who drafted it have a poor knowledge of the working of the Uni- versity, and will certainly prejudice persons who might have supported the league in the future. The petition is directed to the Regents, and advocates: (1) No increase in tuition fees; (2) No dismissal of assistants or instructors; and (3) The organization of a democratically elected fac- ulty committee to control expenditures of the budget. We wish to point out that, regarding the first point of this petition, tuition fees are deter- mined by the deans and other administrative heads of the various colleges of the University, and not by the Regents at all. They are justly de- termined at present and we have every reason to believe that they will continue to be. If it is found necessary to raise such fees then there can be no alternative; but we are convinced that, if so, it will be done judiciously, and without the advice of the National Student League. Regarding the dismissal of assistants or in- structors, it is sufficient to say that many of them are employed with the understanding that their services will be required for only one year. Con- stant changes in a large faculty are inevitable- they must take place if the University is to pro- gress, the National Student League notwithstand- ing. As for the organization of a faculty political group to control University expenditures-such an idea is, on the face, absurd, ridiculous, futile, and out of order. We have at present an admin- istrative organization that is perfectly qualified to cope with the matter of balancing the Uni- versity's budget, as justly as it can be accomp- lished. This organization deserves the unqualified support and co-operation of every student and faculty member of the University. We ask that, for once, students weigh the situa- tion thoroughly in their minds before signing the petition and that they accept the doctrines ex- pressed at National Student League mass meet- ings only after due thought-and then with a grain of salt. Enforcement Machinery Of Fraternty Proposals . . TOMORROW NIGHT at the Union the Interfraternity Council will discuss the proposals submitted last week by the committee of four national secretaries of leading fraternities, sent by the National Fraternity See- ance with the new rules would be checked. Should a house fall below the new standards, its condition would be reported to its financial adviser by the dean. The adviser would then attempt to remedy the matter. If the condition remained the same, the fraternity would be reported by the dean ofI the Interfraternity Council's Judiciary Commit- tee, composed of five students, three faculty mem- bers, and three non-faculty fraternity alumni. This committee might, if it could accomplish nothing itself, refer the matter either to the Sen- ate Committee on Student Affairs or the national offices of the fraternity in question. Thus the complicated machinery by which the proposed requirements would be enforced would not confer upon any one individual or group des- potic power that might make possible the ruth- less closing of a number of fraternities. On the other hand it appears that it would be sufficiently effective to put the proposals into operation, It thus becomes apparent that there is no rea- son to fear a discriminatory or too hasty adminis- tration of the rules, and those who have been inclined to view them unfavorably on this score may withdraw their opposition. There seems to be little doubt that the rules themselves are inherently wise. The fact that many successful houses have already adopted sim- ilar ones for themselves is a strong argument in their favor, one which will in all probability be advanced at the meeting tomorrow. Their employ- ment by fraternities now on the financial border- line may prove to be a deciding factor in enabling them to remain open. Because they are good rules, and because they would be.. administered fairly and reasonably, we believe the Interfrater- nity Council will do well to accept them. The Gefrn Side Of The.uestion . WHILE the world, and Germany and France in particular, anxiously await Herr Adolf Hitler's address to the German Reichstag this afternoon, it may be well to con- sider briefly the "other" side of the situation- the pro-German side. . The Deutsche Diplomatische Politische Korre- spondenz, a semi-official subsidiary of Wolff, Ger- many's leading news dissemination agency, speaks of sabotage on the part of the French, blaming them for the current rupture of the disarma- ment deliberations now in progress at Geneva. In- dividual German newspapers state that Herr Hit- ler does not wish war, and claim that even if the fiery chancellor did wish to precipitate a world-wide conflict he would be crushing his own life, ideals, and program. One German paper even says he desires "peace and security" with gradual revision of the more odious (to the German na- tion) clauses of the Versailles treaty. Leading historians and political scientists now firmly believe, and it can be substantially proven, that Germany in 1914 did not wish a World War. It can further be effectively argued that France would have invaded Belgium in the early stages of the war if Germany had not beaten her to it. Many other popular hypotheses concerning the World War, such as the myth of the one guilty nation, are patently false yet doubly dangerous because they are not apparent until the damage has been done. This time the world should count ten-and then not revert to blood and iron. a i ee Editorial Comment ON MAKING DATES AND PAYING THE CHIT A westward movement for female date-making and financing has swept past our conservative in- stitution and was last reported at rest in the Uni- versity of South Dakota. Men, who so far, have not effectually objected to woman's political rise have generously sur- rendered their time-sanctified right to make and pay for dates. How well women may succeed is indicated by the systematic way in which they go at the date business, nothing like the primitive, hap-hazard way men make crude lists of telephone numbers with names written in code for protection from snooping brothers. In Los Angeles, the junior college co-eds keep little black books in which every eligible male is listed and classified with scientific precision. Rice Institute coeds classify unsuspecting males into these categories: best necker, worst necker, best kisser, worst kisser, biggest tightwad, freest spender, the man I would rather be seen with, and the man I don't want to be seen with. Byron said that love is a woman's life. Appa- rently she.can make it her business, too. --The Minnesota Daily TERM PAPERS- End of terms seems to be specially set aside by instructors for the writing of term papers by their students. Thus is a time-honored custom carried on. Now, it is our view that term papers are per- fectly all right, if they are prepared in accord- ance with the ideal whpich lies behind their in- clusion as a part of the requirements of a course. That ideal, stated briefly, is, that the preparation of the paper involve research on the subject from more than the obvious material, that some tying- up of facts and data be made that might throw new light on the subject under study, and that nhcriva tinn sho u ldh a rlP a nd rnn l rinc. The Theatre WHO DOES NOT DANCE By LUDWIG LEWISOHN (Editor's Note: Mr. Lewisohn is reprinted by permission) A dancer who does not dance; an actress who does not speak; a dramatist wilo makes the audi- ence supply the drama. She is to the stage what the imagists are to poetry. There is the same un- Emotional projection, the stripped and scrupu- lously selected image, the cleanly visualized line. This is to imply that the painter predominates and, in effect, the art of Angna Enters is that of a painting which has escaped the static limita- tions of its canvas. In the "episodes" entitled "Promenade" and "Aphrodisias-Green Hour" she makes scarcely a step, never any but the most furtive motions. And yet in one, a half-bold, half-bored flirt has walked out of a Manet por- trait; in the other, the ennui of the unsuccess- ful streetwalker, the mechanical smile fading into apathy, the cold shudder, are a shifting composite of a dozen Daumiers. Enters' "Odalisque," with her slow curves, har'd eyes, and soft sloven perversity, is definitely Re- noir. "Moyen Age" is a set of frescoes in counter- point. No wonder that her admirers are largely recruited from the field of art: Joan Sloan, Geolgia O'Keefe, Robert Henri, Alfred Stieglitz, Robert Edmond Jones have praised her in un- reserved superlative. And rightly. She is one of them, and she is more. She is what their work moves toward. What are her qualities? From tie complexity of effects, wit emerges first. Extraordinarily subtle, almost febrile, here is a species of wit that is both lightly mocking and completely devastat- ing. Observe "La Sauvage Elegante," with its self- contradiction of the formal pirouetting of the court of Louis XIV and the latest fashion note from Peru. Observe "Feline," where, instead of a costume made to imitate the body of cat, the woman, in quasi-Spanish black lace, is a cat. A cat? Here, in its combination of suave cruelty, smooth grace, abnormal wisdom, and uncomprehending inno- cence, is Cat abstract, complete and absolute. "1927-Entr'acte" is, on the surface, ridiculous; a sketch at criticism. Yet here, in the least lovely of her composition, this artist pillories a genera- tion whose rosary is a lipstick and whose Golden Treasury is a "line" of wisecracks. But wit alone would make her work dry and over-cerebral. Humour saves Angna Enters from a tendency to intellectualize, an impulse to allow the wicked brain free run of its own malice. Sometimes the humour is broad, as in the almost boisterous delineation of the schoolgirl in "Field Day." Less burlesque but even richer in humour is the earthy and robust "Contra Danse." Here is a sweep more liberal than the artist usually permits herself; the mime not only dances the peasant off her feet, she creates a stageful of dancers, each vigorously and swiftly differentiated. This is the very antithesis of the stilted, ogling "cake- walk"; comment and criticism cease; Breughel is joined to Beethoven. But much as one respects the witty exposer of sham elegance and enjoys the hearty NATUR- KIND, the two qualities which distinguish Angna Enters are curiously combined: the macabre and the tender "Black Magic" and Heptameron No. 1," that concise drama with its reminiscence of Browning's "The Laboratory," which all but baffles the audience, are cases in point. Here is an evocation of all that is masked, twisted, paradox- ical, perverse . . . And then, amazingly, when we have concluded there is no warmth in the woman, she breaks down the last reserve with tenderness. With a minimum of "effects" she reveals all the awkward coquetry of a Vienna Backfisch ("Geschichten aus dem Wiener Wald"); the incredible pathos of long adolescent afternoons in "Piano Music," in which there is no mere appearance but the es- sense of reality; the dissolving and fusing of a hundred Madonnas in "The Queen of Heaven." Here is the eternal mother, baring her breast to anguish, disclosing the world's secret in the Rose of the World. Here instead of gesture is illumina- tion. She is an arresting and even astonishing phe- nomenon. Beginning where other dancers leave off, she furnishes one of the most imaginative experiences in the theatre today. LENORE ULRIC IN DETROIT "Hard-Boiled Angel," starring Lenore Ulric and presented by Arch Selwyn, will be seen at the Cass Theatre for four days only, beginning Sun- day evening, May 21, with a matinee on Wednes- day. A new comedy in three acts by Wilson Collison, author of the riotous success, "Up in Mabel's Room," "Hard-Boiled Angel" has been carefully selected for the alluring Miss Ulric as a play of extreme merit suitable to the noted heroine of "Tiger Rose," "Kiki," "Lulu Belle," "The Pagan Lady" and other well-remembered triumphs. Arch Selwyn, the producer responsible for "Twin Beds," "Within The Law," "Smilin' Through," "Fair and Warmer," "Buddies," "This Year of Grace" and "Private Lives" with Noel Coward, whom he really discovered, "The Devil Passes," and innumerable other hits of the theatre has placed Lenore Ulric under personal contract and believes that with stars of her calibre and good plays like "Hard-Boiled Angel" the legiti- mate theatre can easily be brought back to its own within a very short time. Surounding Miss Ulric with a cast of distinc- tion, Catherine Dale Owen, Paul Kelly, Henry Daniell, Jane Farrell and Walter Armitage are most prominent, all featured players with envious records of success in both the theatre and talking pictures. The scene of "Hard-Boiled Angel" is laid in the mountainous district between Los Angeles and San Francisco, portraying in its humorous way the involvedc lives of a croup of neonle who need 1 I LAW -%i I t JUEN P-i' H F 1- P.%-i - ()L J I L I N L%-i