THE MI UTGA WAIL THTMISI)AV. ARPT.' 34_ 1410 THE M aCHT :AN DaILY e r ,a, l.!1 I'~h~T1?~~AV I~'DI°r. z THE MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 and musical intelligence." March 8 will fihd Vladimir Horowitz, Russian pianist, at Ann Arbor. The greatest of all artists who will appear on the musical program is Ignace Jan Paderewski, "dean of pianists," who will play here on March 15. Paderewski made his first visit to Ann Arbor b j _ ByDIAGONAL By Barton Kane i 40 years ago, and has returned seven times since I I .. ' b. Y r C )h.1 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 sews published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as secon~d class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer byrcarrier, $1.00; by mall, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,- Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: College Publishers Representatives. Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago.' EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ..............FRANK B. GILBRETH CITY EDITOR......................KARL SEIBFFERT SPORTS EDITOR..................JOHN W, THOMAS WOMEN'S EDITOR................MARGARET O'BRIEN ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR.......ELSIE FELDMAN NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, Norman F. Kraft, John W. Pritchard, Joseph W. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Glenn R. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Ward D. Morton, Albert Newman. . e x r s 1 then. The Music School deserves much praise for the number of internationally known artists which it is bringing to Ann Arbor. Few people have the opportunity of hearing such talented musicians as are being presented in Ann Arbor this year It is an opportunity which the students ought to avail themselves. With the co-operation of every one, this season should be the greatest in the history of the Choral Union. The Daily Inaugurates ANew Policy. REPORTERS . Stanley W. Arnhelm, Edward Andrews, Hyman J. Aronstam, A. Ellis Ball, CharlesG. Barndt, James Bauchat, Donald R. Bird, Donald F. Blankertz, Willard E. Baser, Charles B. Brownson, C. Garritt urting. Arthur W. Carstens, Theodore K. Cohen, bert S. Deutsch, Donald Elder, Robert Engel, Albert Ffedminn, Edward A. Genz, Harold Gross, Eric Hall, John C. Healey. Robert B. Hewett, M. B. Higgins, Alex- ancler Hirschfeld, Walter ,E. Morrison, Ward D. Morton, Robert Ruwitch, Alvin Schifer, G. Edwin Sheldrick, Robert W. Thorne, George Van Vleck, Cameron Walker, Guy M. Whipple, Jr., W. Stoddard White, Leonard A. Rosenberg. Jesske L. Barton, Eleanor B. Blum, Jane H. Brucker, Miriam Carver, Beatrice Collins, Mary J. Copeman, Louise Crandall, Mary M.. Duggan, Prudence Foster, Alice Gilbert, Carol J.. Hannan, Therese R. Herman, Frances Manchester, Elizabeth Mann, Edith E. Maples, Marie Metzger, Marie J. Murphy, Margaret C. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Beverly Stark, Alma Wadsworh, Mar- jorie Western, Josephine Woodhams. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.............BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER,... ,... >. ,......... HARRY BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER........DONNA BECKER DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Aqdvertising, 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: Theodore Barash, Jack Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Charles Ebert, Jack, Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Howard Klein, Allen knuusi, George Laurie, Charles Mercil, Russell Read, Lester Skinner, Joseph Sudow and Robert Ward. Bett~y Aigler, Edna Canner, Genevieve Field, Ann Gall- meyer, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, elen Grossner,' Kathryn Jackson , Dorothy Laylin, Virginia McComb, Caroline Mosher, Helen O0on, Helen Schume, May See fried, Kathryn Stork.- Raucous Bromage Freshman Hot-Shots Fraternity Tea B EGINNING w i t h the Tuesday morning issue, The Daily inaugu- rated a new policy of putting men's social activi- ties on a page of campus society news. This is in no sense relegating the fraternity news to the "women's page." The page on which these items will be found in the future is de- signed to be as close an approximation to the society page of a metropolitan paper as it is possible to make it. Rather than on the front page where they have been found formerly, all stories of a distinctly social nature, whether per- taining to men's or women's activities, will be on the society page. From now on, all women's news items will be treated as any other story in The Daily. That is, it will be put on page two, three, or the froht page with regard for nothing but it's news value, exactly as any other article. There is no longer a "woman's page." The society page has, to a certain extent, taken its place, but there will be no curtailment of the stories about women's activities. The only dif- ference is that these stories will now appear on the front page instead of on page five. There is no real reason why the women should be segre- gated and all stories of interest to them crowded on to one page, There is, however, a very real reason why all fraternity and sorority and other organization social activities should be classified together and put in the same place. In the future, all items dealing with women's sports activities are to be placed on the sports pages with other sport articles. In short, in the past certain pages in The Daily have been directed at particular groups on the campus and these groups read only these sections. This rearrangement is planned to make the whole paper of interest to every one on the campus. No more specialization. The whole Daily is for the whole student body, Y Y ! e s t t i G r,{ pROF. ARTHUR W. BROMAGE, political sci- ence lecturer, yesterday was explaining to class 107 that the recitation room would be changed from the first floor of Angell Hall to the basement. Said Mr. Bromage, "I don't like the pillar loungers outside with raucous voices to compete with mine." EDWARD J. McCORMICK, tycoon of last year's Student Council, is back in school. For the second time in less than a year he will attend both of the state political conventions as a dele- gate; will vote for repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. * ~** MARJORY WESTFESSEN is a freshman. Yes= terday she walked up to the Romance Lang- uage building; looked the front over carefully; stopped a junior; said that she always thought Angell Hall had pillars in front of it. * * * ROBERT HILTY and DURWOOD HARRIS, first year men, are being rushed by most of the fraternity houses on the campus. Hot-shots Hilty and Harris are keeping notes on the quality of the food that they receive at the various houses, are saving a few open dates for the last week of rushing; will fill these with the houses which serve the best meal; say that rushing is helping out their budgets considerably. * * * STUDENT COUNCILMAN George Lambrecht thinks the members of the class of 1936 should wear their pots. "Cap night," says Mr. Larmbrecht, "would not be much fun if there were no caps." M * M IT IS RUMORED that a certain fraternity on the campus is trying to get permission to rush in a big way. A tea dance on the afternoon of the Michigan State game, with special women im- ported from Detroit, is the plan. The fraternity can find nothing in the rushing rules against it. They say that they can secure an orchestra for a moderate price and the women from Detroit for nothing. PROF. ARTHUR L. CROSS has dismissed his Constitutional History course twice now be- fore the end of the hour. His students are won- dering if it really is the hardest course on the campus after all. .) a a /Last Opportunity, TO BUY 9 0 The M~hgnDail From Campus Sawlesmrenc To Insure Getting Tomriorr~ow Morni ng's Daily Subscribe Todcay. w NNW, A114 .OO11, ~4,5Ii a Year, Del voe I THlE TI-IATRE By Ge-orge Spelvin The Choral Union "Carries On" . . T HE PROGRAM of the fifty-fourth annual concert series of the Uni- versity Choral Union, which was recently an-' nounced, indicates that the society, under the directorship of Charles A. Sink, will not sacrifice the qualtiy of its music, merely because financial conditions in Ann Arbor are at a low ebb. Proceeding on the theory that many successful businesses follow during depressions, the Choral Union has increased the value of its product and by so doing, is offering to the students of the University a series of concerts far above the gen- eral run. The organization deserves to be congratulated on the splendid series that they are offering to music lovers. Realizing that the University is rapidly building up its reputation as a concert center, the Choral Union has, instead of securing second-rate artists as it could have done in a de- pression year, organized a program which can justly be called the finest in history. The result is that students attending the Uni- versity will have the opportunity of hearing world- falnous artists and Ann Arbor will gain addi- tional prestige as the music center of the middle west. The Boston Symphony Orchestra, internation- ally known, is the first attraction offered by the Choral Union and will appear here on the eve- ning of Oct. 25. Lawrence Tibbett, outstanding baritone of the Metropolitan Opera Company, will sing here Nov. 2. He is oie of the few first-rank musicians who has achieved success in motion pictures. He possesses the rare quality of being able to project his personality into singing. Organized by Ossip' Gabrilowitsch, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, which will play here; Nov. 30, is one of the most popular in the country, Symphony .has appeared regularly on the Choral Union program for many years. Internationally known, Efrem Zimbalist, violin- ist, will perform here on Dec. 12. Mr. Zimbalist is Russian by birth but is considered in many respects an American artist. In 1907 he made his debut in Berlin. Since that time he has been warmly received all over the world. Nathan Milstein, violinist, and Vladimir Horo witz, pianist, are scheduled for Jan. 16. These two artists, together with Piatagorsky, are con- sidered the three outstanding musicians of modern Russia. All three' are products of the Russian Soviet Regime. Another treat of the Choral Union program will be the appearance of Myra Hess, British Editorial Comment STUDENTS SHOULD INSIST ON PRICE REDUCTIONS To the incoming students there is one great consolation in the economic situation in Madison and that, briefly, is the reduction of prices in room, board, and miscellaneous expenses. At last those landlords and boarding-house keepers have been forced to follow the trend in the general price level which has been on the downgrade since the fall of 1929. All those engaged in activities pertaining to the furnishing of living quarters to students in this university town of ours have created either direct- ly or indirectly a situation which has produced a cost of living scale far above what it is worth. The situation confronting the students in the years that we have been in the university reminds one of a group of leeches and bloodsuck~ers taking, advantage of a young but large transient group. Such a set-up is certainly not justifiable. Compare the prices which students pay at Ohio State, Uni- versity of Chicago and Nebraska, and other large universities with those charged here on our cam- pus and one will readily gather the reason for Madison being indicted as a "rich-man's town." A new trend has begun; cooperative houses both for men and women are appearing on the horizon. It is time that the student-body voice its resentment at an environment which attempts to extract exorbitant prices from its temporary pop- ulace. -Wisconsin Daily Cardinal Robert H. Ingersoll's five million dollar fortune has dwindled into an estate of a quarter of a mil- lion, we understand. And the last time we saw one, his "dollar watch" had dwindled into a five- dollar wrist watch. Natural forces aren't so awe-iispiring. A hur- ricane killed more than 30 in Porto Rico. In some southern countries, a revolution does that much damage almost every week. CAMPUS CRITICISM, CAUSTIC AND COSTIVE A Concise Discussion Of The Trenchant Mr. W. J. G. For the last three years William Gorman, triple-threat man of The Daily's intellectual line- up, has given out views on music, drama, and lit- erature. Yet up to the time of his graduation last spring no attempt had been made-in print, at least-to evaluate his work. That is our purpose at the moment. In discussing his criticism, we want to make it clear right at the beginning that we do not hold with Brother Joe Glutz out at the frat club that this fellow Gorman just uses a lot of long words end doesn't really know what he's talking about. The awarding of first prize in New Republic's re- view contest to Mr. Gorman last summer, follow- ing his triumph in the more doubtful Avery Hop- woods the year before, should silence Brother Glutz. That Mr. Gorman knows his facts, we do not dispute. Granting that he piled up a surprising amount of specific knowledge for thedshort time-hardly four years-that he studied his subjects, we would quarrel only with the use he put it to. Or rather, with the fact that he put it to no partic- ular use at all. On re-reading Mr. Gorman's columns, one is struck by one peculiarity especially: the almost miraculous means whereby he could jump from the facts, which were his own, to a conclusion that was often distinctly second-hand. He was, we believe, a keen observer of the details of a campus play, but the opinion derived from them concurred all to frequently with what the New York Times had said the year before. We don't mean that Mr. Gorman showed no signs of what may some day be a fine originality -he was probably exceptional in a student body which has never been known as brilliant, and. which has never produced literature. (The. Uni- versity's tendency to expell such men as Stewart Edward White and Franklin Pierce Adams might account for that.) Gorman was simply a victim of premature sophistication; in his capacity of cultural catch-all he suppressed those vivid, if slightly erroneous, opinions that make young writers worth reading. Scholasticism is the enemy of creative work, and he was scholastic. A point more important, as far as his immedi- ate 'value to the campus goes, is that Mr. Gorman so many times destroyed the value of an idea by his presentation. The common objection, his sup- posed preference for polysyllables, is hardly justi- fied; there were times when his style was clear and simple. His offense was one that he may of- ten have censured in the actors he reviewed; lack of pointing. His attitude of general depreciation was probably the real reason that his criticism had little noticeable effect on dramatics here. Praise from him, being rarity, meant something; condemnation was passed off as meaningless. In that way he lost his chief weapon, and those who might well have listened to him were alienated. Moreover, there can be no doubt that Mr. Gor- man's columns, while not really abstruse rhetori- cally, were often wholly out-of-place-not even the Times would have printed them. On those occasions he gave the impression of shutting him= self up in a verbal room where he fought esoteric battles against an unmentioned opponent. His supposition that even a minority of the Daily's readers was familiar with the battleground was not the impracticalitvynof a fine~ mind hut the af- The Parker Pen Company Atnn ounces: -~ OLD MECHANCAL PENcILS[A~Y /194 OL A TieyTrd-N'Sl $5 DuflrLdyDoodPn adteNwBuiesUtr nn .',ta* yse oao nfry r l p o th n sr m e onl ~ nd n ld encl Prkr Duool Pe rm75 to .0fo anolcai $3.2oo o Lady Duofold Pen, capni onaie new Bsteminess urPncl only ~- and an old penci Tbeu Priers fnstok and late-exlusv jeweiskea colos innon-reaablePermnit-SeaGree an P$7K Prkr tofd Sr.aPn, Blacks, laknd Per, Black and ther-a ony$5 0 andwnc an ou old pen godmonenn alw th ar er' spr-smooth, only -and a old enspearder " Duofold o intc t L fra in caacty m hand- $4.25 LayDoodPencil ac, qcsartni ng, non-clne femedDood ecl only -~t and an old penlcii bTh Pres fn and lsyutae in-dxcnotve tbek $7 Prke DufoldSr.Parkelrs. 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C omew ithissaetlasts.aaitard PAKRDOODPNo CLPyonly $5 and yan old penci hePn and Pecl ogrd nd o ae t b new1PrkrDuofoldLPeilaYourcnnteoM AieR HDtold r Eh R get ahnt for a teridofld Pon thorsctem pen aldn1 Souh $air old i $5iesLuxecki ld-tyepn.tY, rpendils. Hketheyo to hnest pn hountestradye i wrt.125 ®2.®twadi, hl t e m lie sd 'wak o twith a an d nQewk only -nd an ld pecil Pa$er.Dodn o P encil, ordboth. But hy allwe o od ecamalpeci timad e. hCPrkrm en Co.,Jansi l le, isos n 3 Bng Parkr 0od Pen s our chnce t TMAYER-MC HEAlRER gtator About thLE pCefhe Upen2.5 fo yor ld e. Cometo-n0.aD.MORRILL Typewiriter and Stationery Store, I By Kathleen Murphy r 1 FACULTY CONCERT SERIES BEGINS The Faculty Concert series of the School of Music will begin next Sunday, Oct. 2, at 4:15 p. m. in Hill Auditorium. The following. program will be presented: Recit. "Deeper and Deeper Still" from "Jephtha". .........................Handel Aria, "Waft Her Angels" from "Jephtha" .................. ....Handel Arthur Hackett Prelude in C Minor . ..................... Chopin Mirage ....................... ........Salzedo Lamento........................Hasselmans Ruth .fohl ]La Fontaine IDe Caraouet ..............Letorey