T HLE MCH-GA~ ~LY THE1 MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 T) .ms ' a 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 Assocla- 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 niot othrerwiise credited in this paper and the local news published 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 Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $ $50, During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.5. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: college Publishers Representatives, Inc., 40 East ThrtyLFourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North ..Michigan Avenue, Chicago. ED RA GAFF elehne 92 MANAGNG EDITOR.............RANK. B. GILBRETH C SIAT EDRITR.. ........... .....ANRL SEIFFERT E13KITOR.........JOHiN W. THOMAS W aMEN'S EDITOR...........MARGARET O'BRIEN ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITO .......ELSIE FELDMAN NIO T EDITORS: Thomas connellan, Norman F. Kraft, Joh W. Pritchard, Joseph W.Renlhan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Glenn R. Winters. BPORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman. REPORTERS: Edwa.rd Andrews, Hyian J. Aronstam, A. ERis Bi Dl, C1halesG. Baardtt.z,n' eBauchat, Donald R..rid Doa14 PV. Bankertz, ChArles B. Brownson, Arthiur W. Carstens, ponald Elder, Robert Engel, Ed- wdA. G",Erc Hall, Jhn C. Hfeey, Robert B. UjOtt, Alvinz Scleter, George Van Veck, Cameron ,r, Guy M. Wihipple, Jr., W. Stoddard White, Leonard A. Rosenberg._ leanor B, Blunt, Mira Carver, LouseCrandall, Carol ~DHann~n, Frantces Machester, Marie J. Mur1phy, Margaret C. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Marjorie West emn ana Harriet Speiss. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.............BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER.......... .......HARRY BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......DONNA BECKER DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; Advertising Contracts, Orvll Aronson; Advertising Serv- lce, Noel Turner; Accounts. Brnard E.- Scinake; Cir- culation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Finn. ASSISTANTS: Theodore Barash, Jack Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Lester Skin- ner, Joseph Sudow and Robert Ward. Betty Aigler, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Dorothy aylin, Helen Olson, Helen Schume, May Seegfried, Kathryn Stork. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1932 How Fraternities Can Help Themselves. F AATERNITIES may as well face the facts. There are at least 19 houses on the camnpus that will have to go out of existence because of financial troubles. As was pointed out in an editorial yesterday, with 409 men eligible to be pledged and 59 general fra- ternities listed on the campus, there are too many houses and not enough freshmen. If 19 houses go out of existence and one may assume equal distribution of new members for the remaining 40, there will be enough first year men to give each house a class of 10 a year. This, we believe, is the minimum that a house can take over a long period of time and still re- main solvent. Naturally, the period of adjustment will be diffi- cult. One cannot help regretting the fact that many of the weaker houses must collapse. How- ever, it is the only solution of an unfortunate situation. There is one constructive measure that the In- terfraternity Council might take in order to avoid a similar condition in the future and to protect the houses that will weather the storm. A ruling should be passed by the Council asking the Senate Committee to prohibit the installation of new chapters here. With the return of pros- perity, it is certain that the administration will be flooded with the usual number of requests for the installation of new fraternities on the campus. If the Senate Committee would pass a ruling that none of the petitions be granted, future In- terfraternity 'Councils, blinded by prosperity, will not have the power to allow the fraternity system again to grow faster than the University enroll- ment. This will avoid a recurrence of the present financial strangulation that certain houses are facing. Editorial Comment E DEATH TO LIBERALISM AT COLUMBIA fount of Up-to-Date Education; that she should give more consideration to the student's own ideas; and that the less the student is restricted the more he is e-duc-ated, the more is he devel- oped from within. To those few pupils who still look to Columbia as their teacher this recent action on the part of the Butler forces has dealt a death blow to fur- ther development of liberal expression of student opinion. But to those one-time pupils who are now liberal teachers themselves the action is merely a final proof of their former teacher's re- actionary attitude. If education does anything at all for the stu- dent, it should certainly teach him when, where, and what he can speak of his own accord. But Dr. Butler thinks differently. A member of the faculty must say when and where the student can speak. And if what he speaks is not in keeping with the beliefs of the faculty member, the stu- dent will be in grave danger of being expelled. So treat an educated student, prescribes Dr. Butler. In the final analysis, if Columbia University desires in the future to be looked upon as a liberal institution of higher learning she must first prove herself worthy of such a title, or else she will soon find herself classed as "just another university where faculty supervision reigns supreme". North Carolina Tar Heel THE THEATRE By George Spelvin show is one of the most promising now on Broad- way. Like Dig des, Edward G. Robinson, the original Shurdli, has gone to the movies. He has played star' parts in "Little Caesar," "Two Seconds," "The Hatchet Man," and so on, and is regarded as the super-melodrama man of the films. Mr. Windt's cast for the play is under rehearsal for the production which will be seen here the week-end of the Princeton game. TyP E wR I TIY X UI Mu G APHINTG ~rmtly and n e~ty done i our o sho 'jay Vn~ent OD. MORRI LL, 3%4 S. ,Stwe eSt.,Ann kbor# p ' rTE CUTTING CAFE 709 South State Street SERVING ABUNDANTLY OF FINE, HOME-COOKED FOOD Music at Sunday Dinner and Three Nights a Week. Our Speil-y Homemade Pies MUSIC By Kathleen Murphy Quick Service Give Us a Try ABOUT WHAT WE SHALL HEREINAFTER REFER TO AS THE CAMPUS DRAMATICS SITUATION So many people have spoken their minds or whatever they had in place of them on the ques- tion of What's Wrong With Play Production that we hesitate to bring the subject up again -even though none of them came very close to the truth of the matter. Their error is generally that of blaming on the direction faults that arise from the inexperience of the actos. Play Production and Comedy Club have long had a tradition of good technical work; it has been possible to sit through their plays without feeling the exasperations usually attendant on amateur theatricals - false beards don't fall off, doublets don't often come three sizes too large, nor is it customary for the scenery to fall over. Even the lamentable Mimes showed a renaissance in this respect last year. The student companies have usually, we believe, had intelligent direction. What will be the weak point this year and what has al- ways been the weak point is the acting. That the common run of plays here are intel- lectually ragged is indisputable. Their failure to carry over a mood or a theme completely should not be laid entirely at the door of their directors, however. The fact is that the directors have no proper acting talent to carry out ideas, rather han lacking the ideas themselves. The hope of our national drama may or may not be with the Little Theatre as opposed to that sordid Broadway, but it is refreshing to watch a professional company tear into a dull script and Bome out with a lively play simply by fishing up bits of business from the past and playing togeth- er one thing our amateurs can't learn. Certain- y, as long as appearing on a stage remains a ter- rifyingly new experience, the actor isn't going to be very aware of what's going on beyond his own personal performance. The University, in its administration of Play Production, does not encourage students to spend more than their junior and senior years on the subject, and though exceptions are possible, a sophomore public speaking course normally pre- cedes it. Freshmen are not admitted to Play Pro- duction. This seems unfortunate when it is remembered that acting is the art that offers one a pre-emi- nent opportunity to make' an ass of oneself. The young writer and the young painter don't come in direct contact with their public, and the young musician (since he must begin much earlier) isn't in nearly as bad a spot. But the young actor! He must act before someone, and perforce his soul is stripped naked in public. It doesn't matter to the student body (luckily!) that our young writers are poor specimens-we would rather get our reading from outside, any- how, and our music and art in the same way. But Ann Arbor isn't getting road shows anymore, and never did get enough of them. Undergraduate dramatics are a necessity-and yet the University obviously isn't training actors early enough. Play Production, we feel, is underemphasized in proportion to the interest it arouses and the serv- ice it performs. And just why freshmen should be considered unfit for the sophisticated state of being Play Productioners, we can't pretend to understand. We hope that some day thetcourse can be developed into a separate department; of more immediate importance is our belief that a four-year undergraduate course is the only rem- edy for the ills of campus dramatics. The plan offers no practical difficulties, since Play Production courses could be kept down to their present total enrollment by careful selection of students for the advanced classes. This column intends to campaign for the improvement at all opportunities, and will welcome libel, personal in- sults-and even debate--on the subject.. CONCERNING THE ADDING MACHINE By R. E. M. Now that we have seen Helen Westley, the big horsey landlady of "Reunion in Vienna" in Detroit last week, our memories trot back about nine or ten years to the spring of 1923 when this self- same Helen Westley was showing in New York as ,the nagging Mrs. Zero of "The Adding Machine." And why we go back to the time when Miss West- ley was playing in "The Adding Machine" is be- cause that play is soon to be done on campus with a Laboratory Theatre cast. We wonder what has happened to the original cast of Elmbr Rice's fa- mous modernistic play. Helen Westley, the original Mrs. Zero, is. ap- pearing this week in Detroit, as we have said; and a rare opportunity it is to see her at our own door, for being a member of the Theatre Guild Bbard her executive duties seldom allow her to play out- side New York. She has apeared continually in Guild shows since its organization in 1919. Dudley Digges, who was with the Guild in its early days, and who has been director of a num- ber of their outstanding productions, played the original Mr. Zero, bookkeeper drudge hero of "The Addling Machine." No longer with the Guild, how- PALMER CHRISTIAN Concert Overture . Maitland Vision .....................Rheinberger Lied des Chrysanthemes...........Bonnet Matin Provencal,............... Sonata in the Style of Handel.. Wolstenholme Rosace (Esquisse Byzantine) ..........Mulet Meditation a Ste. Clothilde.........James Piece Heroique ............... . .. Franck Today's organ recital will be one of contrasts and comparisons with the i n t e r e s t centering around the great Franck. The Overture is char- acterized by a joyous, pulsating rythm alternating with moods of quietness. It is in two main parts-- after a deliberate introduction, the main theme is anounced, marked by decisive, clearly-cut writing. The second section is in the nature of a choral, its first two presentations being quiet, its last work- ing up into a brilliant climax at the end, calling for full organ. While his native ability was great, his industry was greater, and it is as a teacher rather than a composer, that Rheinberger is known today. Of his many works for the organ this Vision is called the least pedantic and the most truly inspired. Bonnet, who needs no intro- duction to the music lovers of today, has written these lovely "Autumn Poems" for the smaller "Orgue de Salon", and they can very well be term- ed "chamber music" not intended for the demands of the concert hall. The "Matin Provencal" is pure program music with its morning bells, singing birds, and happy peasants on their way to work, which, of course, are filled in very much to one's pleasure. The "Sonata in the Style of Handel" is imitation, but imitation that can stand on its own merit. It is typically Handel - pure in style and clear in workmanship -- and so perfectly a char- acterization of his spirit that he might easily have written it himself in one of his better moments. Picturization in music has been, and still is, the source of considerable argument, but so effectively does Mulet trace the delicate lights and shadows of the exquisite Rose Window of the Sacre Coeur in Paris, that this lovely sketch becomes a decided point against the "Absolutists Theory". The Medi- tation a Ste. Clothilde is a tribute to Franck, who was for many years organist at this church in Paris. There is an insistent emphasis upon one of the themes taken from the D minor symphony which brings before one the picture of the old or- ganist dreaming over the keys in the quiet dusk and thinking aloud in his music. Rightly the pro- gram ends with the magnificent Piece Heroique by Franck himself, one of the most important of this composer's works for the organ, an instrument which was such an essential part of himself that he never could quite lose its influence, no mater what medium lie happened to be writing for. A Washington BYSTANDER By Kirke Simpson P i wro In The Interest of Good Government- Hear Nellie Tayloe Ross Designed and fashioned for the man who demands dis- Look for tinction in, every detail of the name dress. The modern Tux set SWANK shown has the new SWAN K whenyoubuyBridle-Sit link. Sets - when yoi bUY $250 up, Collar Holders Other SWA N K Evening Shirt Klips Sets up to $10.00 at Jewe Cuff Links . A' anil smart men' s shops= Collar Buttons Money Klips Tie l~lips Evening Sets Collar Pins Former Governor of Wyoming 8 O'CLOCK TONIGHT WHITNEY THEATER Presented to the Public by the Washtenaw County Women's Democratic Club - -- _, i I I A Good Book Is Fine Entertainment! Many titles are typical entertainment for almost any- body's thoughtless moments. Competently written mystery stories in which suspense is held by multiple murders. Stimula.ting books for interested readers. Books by such authors as Warwick Deeping, Tiffany Thayer, Christopher Morley and others are the heigth or depth of something or other. In addition to what- ever entertainment value these many volumes may possess, the public has been well impressed by the intellectual importance of reading them. Visit Our Fiction and NonFiction Department -EUBothirytoresA Slater's Tw apsBookstores State Street East University Avenue WASHINGTON - Senator Brookhart's remark that the situation in Iowa following his defeat in the primaries by his Republican rival, Henry Field, is "too sweet" for him to stay out of prompts the question: Sweet for whom? On the face of it, the Iowa senatorial battle would suggest that a three-way race $J might be beneficial to the democratic candidate. Iowa Democrats have profited before by the internal row . among their Republican oppo- nents, of which Brookhart's de- feat for renomination is the most recent sign. More than likely the senator had in mind the farmer drive to force higher prices when he said that the Iowa "rebellion" was too sweet for hime to keep out. 1 r3 k"4ART He may have convinced him- self, at least, that in another campaign tilt with Field lie could turn the tables on the victor and come back to the senate anyhow. WISCONSIN'S DIFFERENT However it may be in Iowa, it is a curious as- pect of American p o 1 i t i c s that an apparently similar situation in Wisconsin due to primary de- feat of Governor La Follette and Senator Blaine. irregular Republicans, shapes up a wholly different way so far as democratic hopes may be concerned. In Iowa probably Brookhart's announcement of his independent or third-party candidacy was hailed with joy by Louis J. Murphy, Democratic candidate for the senate, and by the Democratic national campaign management as well. Should Governor La Follette and Senator Blaine in Wisconsin follow the Brookhart example, how- ever, many political calculations would reckon it a blow at Democratic hopes of doing something for themselves in Wisconsin. On the same day that Senator Brookhart de- clared himself into the Iowa political pot again, his primary defeat notwithstanding, Senator George Norris of Nebraska accepted a commission from the National Progressive League to stump the west for Governor Roosevelt. A PROBLEM FOR NORRiS Which presents the possibility that Iowa might be on the Norris schedule when he starts out to urge Roosevelt'selection to the Presidency. It is going to be a mai front of the campaign as evi- denced by President Hoover's decision to make one 'of his few campaign addresses at Des Moines. It would be natural for the progressive league to date up Norris for Iowa. What would he do about Brookhart's senatorial race? Would he 140 I it Ii __. .. .. .. _ A . e R .. _ _._- a -- According to a recent issue of the Columbia Spectator Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler and his re- actionary cohorts have renewed their attack on free expression of student opinion which they be- gan last spring with the expulsion of Reed Harris as editor of the student paper. This time they have passed a rule which prohibits "meetings of aiiy organization connected with Columbia Uni- versity which are open to the public . . . unless a faculty member' of professorial rank will volunteer. to act as chairman" - thus depriving the students of the full advantage of their last means of true and unhindered expression. The Harris expulsion put a damper on complete expression through the columns of the Spectator, and this new ruling will have a similar effect on student mass meetings.. The regulation might well be considered as a direct slam at the integrity of Columbia students. And it is certainly none too complimentary of modern education as symbolized by Columbia Uni- versity. University of Miehigan Oratorical Association r-- -- Cors Hill Auditorium - Schedule1 Of Lectures Oct. 29-Lowell Tomas ,I+rom Singapore to Mandalay" (Motion Pictures) Nov. 10-William Butler Yeats "The Irish Renaissance" Dec. 1-Frederick William Wile :: .;->:::.::':"' hind theScenes in Washington" ~''.'~ Jan. 11-Will Durant "The American Crisis" Feb. 21-Carveth Wells FREDERICK WILLIAM WILE "Noah's E ome Town" WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS (Motion Pictures) Mar. 9-Dr. Raymond 11. Ditmars "TheBig Animals" (Motion Pictures) MAlT. t tob?~ ~ 11 11 11