THE MICHIGAN DAILY IE MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 sirability of a system which sets an institution blowing up of the entire life of a great educational created for classroom instruction at the unhappy institution whenever the dilettantes meet to de- business of regulating private lives. cide that there are too many battleships? At the rate of $27,000,000 per ship more or less? You two-footed thinking organism, what do you register about this freedom? Other Universities C amp us pinion have voted long since. Why so slow, the Harvard of the West? Grace Farnsworth, Grad. I _ Published every mornng except Monday during the University yearand Sumner Session by the Board in Cotrol of Student'Publications.' Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion a-1 the-Bg Ten News Service. so agd _!ogae$es - *1933 NA 10MM wv 1934 - . 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 published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches ar'e rserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as =fcond classt matter. 'Special rae of postage granted by Third Asistant Postmaster-Generl. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by .mal, $4,25. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ah Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. #eprese'tatives:; Collee Publications Representatives Inc., 40 Euat Thirty-f ourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Sreet Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 NIAGNG EDITOR......THOMAS K. CONNELLAN J fORIA4L tIRECTOR.......... HART ,SCHAAF S.AEDTITOR.. . .BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS EDITO R........ALBERT H. NEWMAN WO E1'S EDITOR.................CAROL J. HANAN SIGHT EDITORS: A. Elis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- "iam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vieck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. 1 uORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPORTERS: Roy Alexander, John A. Babngton, Ogden G. Dwight, Pail J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. nEvans, Bernard H. Fried, 'Thom~s Grehn, Robert D. Outhrie Joseph L Kpinski, Thomas H. Kleene, Rich- ardE. Lorch, David G. Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, George I. Quimby William R. Reed,1 Robert .S. Ruwitch, Robert J. St. Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith. Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- p'.ine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Mary Roinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret] Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF1 fi "W..Telephone 2-2;4 BUSINESS MANAGER...........W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGSR.............BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER..... ..Y .... .... .... ....CATHARINE MCAHENRYj jDPATMENT MANAGRS: Local Advertising, Fred ier-j icp; Classi ed Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert 'Ward; Accounts, -Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Megs Brt ess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra,- ier, ' John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, David Winkworth. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF] Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Winifred Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Betty Chapman, Patricia Daly, Jean Dur- ham, Minna Giffen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Isabele Kanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina Pollock, Elizabeth J. Simonds. 1 NIGHT EDITOR: E. JEROME PETTIT' Apartm exits, Dormit ories, ] Rooming Rouses . . A MONG the subjects to be voted on tomorrow a particularly interesting one i that related to student residences. At pres- ent #t is necessary for freshman women to live in dormitories. It is necessary for upperclass women and for freshmen men to live only in ap- proved places. It is forbidden that upperclassmen and graduates live in apartments. Students will be, able to say tomorrow whether they favor the rules as they stand; and, if they don't favor them, which of three changes they \v uld like to see made. The three changes would' respectively permit: (1) All graduate students to' live where they chose; (2) All undergraduate men to live where they chose; '(3) All undergraduate' women Wo live where they chose. It is our opinion that the University should have- no jurisdiction whatsoever over student residences. We believe that the business of a university is formal education only, and that for it to interfere in the private life of students is not only beyond its logical Acope but also a breach of taste. Why a university, which hopes for maturity in its stu-' dents, should insult their dignity by insisting that1 they live only where their conduct may be regu-] lated is a question to which we believe there is no logical answer. The French educational system is excellent be-' yond dispute. In most French universities the school officials are agreed .that .it would be rude to pry into the personal matter of where and under what conditions a student shall Jive. (And French universities, to answer the old argument, are state institutions.) Chicago University is a good example of a large schiool which, in this country, h.~as a higha reputa- tion academically -and at the -same time refuses to lay down rules for student residence; even those' co-teds who live in university dormitories have absoltely no rules concer'ning hours. We believe that most parents would prefer free- dom for their sons and daughters. We do not pretend to have talked to the parents of all of Michigan's eight thousand plus students, but we have talked to a good number of them, and the great majority say that as far as they are con- cerned residence rules are unnecessary. Some parents, of course, are convinced that resi- dence supervision is what they wish for their chil- dren. Why not let them have it -and pay for, it? The others should not be obliged to buy some- thing they do not want, nor should their children be fettered with rules neither they nor their' parents think wise. The argument is merely redoubled in the case Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disre- garded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contribu- tors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. PEP AT FRIDAY'S PEP MEETING To the Editor: What is the Michigan of today doing to up- hold the age-old traditions of Michigan spirit and Michigan fight? Aren't we letting individuals carry on the banners of the Maize and Blue with little encouragement from the student body as a whole? Aren't we complacently resting on the laurels of a Michigan ancestry whose pep and co- operative spirit was once the key to her unri- valled success? Our critics say we are and it looks now as though they might be justified. Our football team has been out on the field fighting all year. Not just on Saturdays when we go out and give them a couple of cheers for their pains and aches, but every day of the week, rain or shine, like it or not. Sometimes, I imagine they wonder if the gain to Michigan is actually worth their toll. They may feel that Michigan is not behind them as other schools are behind their teams. It was surprising to hear a number of Michigan men and women criticizing the team because it only won last Saturday's game by four points. They forget that Iowa ranked as one of the best teams in the country and was inspired by a rabid Iowa student body to a fever pitch. They forget also, that Michigan's schedule has been plenty tough and that they themselves have done nothing to encourage a wonderful Michigan foot- ball team which needs only student backing and support to become a world -beater. Michigan does care about her team, I believe, but she doesn't show this spirit in such a way as to give the team the moral backing it deserves. The trouble with us is that we are too undem- onstrative, too unexciteable to give expression to the spirit that would help the team so much. Saturday is to be the climax of Michigan's 1933 football saga; victory for her team Saturday will establish it, unquestionably, as the best football team in the country. We have the best team in the country, but to beat Minnesota we need some- thing more than that. Every Michigan man and every Michigan woman must loose their vocal chords and voice their violent approval of a fight- ing Michigan football team which deserves even more acclaim than some nine thousand of us can possibly give it. There is going to be a pep meeting Fridayk night. Other Michigan pep meetings of recent years have been as tame as quilting bees. But lets not fail our team this time. The members of the team will be there in person and we owe it to them and to; Michigan to go to that pep meeting en masse, to, forget our inhibitions, to forget, for the time being, our reputation of being the Cambridge of the West. Many of us have not so many days to linger at Michigan and this may be our last op- portunity to really show some concerted spirit. Our team needs us. Not just some of us, or most of us, but every one of us. Lits, Engineers, Medics,. Dents, and lawyers. Fraternity men and Inde- pendents, Phi Betes. and Kappa Betes. Bring your dates, bring your landladies, bring your families, bring anyone, but come. Cheer for that football team of ours as you have always wanted to. Show them how proud we are of them. Loosen up. Yell, cheer, clap, and howl. This is the spark our team' needs, and with it, they will burn up the football world and once more will the Wolverine colors be found at the top of the heap, oscured by none. The Theatre "PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD" By CLARENCE MOORE Near the close of the nineteenth century there developed in Ireland a group of dramatists who for the first time gave to the world true and native Irish plays. Master dramatist in this new movement was John Millington Synge, who wrote plays about the most Irish of his countrymenwand build up around them beautiful native atmps- phere and speech. Synge was ideally fitted to por- tray such figures, for he lived for months at a time in the peasant regions of extreme west Ire- land. Although his plays are filled with rollicking hu- mor, he himself was quiet and reserved, and was known even to his friends as the "strange, still man." It is really only in his poems that the true seriousness of his nature is to be found, for in his plays we never find anything, subjective, never any attempt to point a moral; rather we have the sincere joy of a man who enjoys all life, and writes exactly as he feels. The story of "Playboy of the Western World" has for its hero a "braggart wastrel" and patricide, who enters the inn of Michael James a stranger and fugitive. His secrecy and strange manners arouse the curiosity of the peasants at the inn, and finally, through their cajoling, he unfolds the story of his sordid act. Gifted with Cyranic powers of speech, he casts a glamor even over the murder of his father -- "a dirty man, and he getting old and crusty" - and several times they force the hero to retell his tale. Each time it is to an enlarged circle of admirers; and each time he adds to it many savory details. He tells the innkeeper's daughter: "He lifted the scythe and gave it a drive, and I gave a lep to the east. Then I turned around, and I hit a blow on the ridge of the skull, laid him stretched out, and he split to the knob of his gullet." This is the crest of the wave for the hero, for very soon in walks his supposedly murdered father with nothing more than a bandaged head, and our braggart becomes the laughing stock of the vil- lage. To be sure, he does try the murder all over again, but he only arouses the fear and scorn of his former admirers. In Synge's own words, he attempted to give to his characters speeches "fiery, magnificent, yet I tender," and in this aim he succeeded admirably. The play runs along in beautiful cadences, and the lines are filled with a strange rhythm that is I seldom achieved in dramatic prose. All of his characters are simple, happy people, whose speech, though it may sometimes reek of the inn, is al- ways poetically imaginative. His plot situations are simple, and. though he may be - as he always is -more or less ironical, he is never bitter. The product is a pleasant combination of droll humor that always appeals to those who appreciate a really great play. ELEGANT CRIME By ROBERT BENCHLEY (Dramatic Critic of the New Yorker - Reprinted by Special Permission) Few feats of journalism are as simple as re- I porting a good mystery play, because the reporter, in order to be a gentleman, must not tell a single thing about it at all. If he drops the slightest hint as to what happened and who did it, he plays a dirty trick on all the audiences for the rest of the run. And the better the play, the less he is supposed to reveal. So, since "Criminal-at-Large" is a perfectly swell mystery show, full of the most agreeable horrors, with the big idea kept a profound secret until the very end, these lips must be as silent as the tomb. It is certainly very gripping and ex- tremely enjoyable. Here are all the thrillers and curdlers you ever heard of, artfully blended and made to look no less than elegant. You shiver and quake for three acts of the jolliest sort of be- wildered terror. It is appropriate to remark, however, that the horrid secret of "Criminal-at-Large" is divulged in one of the most exciting little scenes that you ever saw in all your life. It made this lone and impressionable critic, sitting at his desk at mid- night, jump and quiver at some odd noises emerg- ing at intervals form the nearby room. Investi- gation showed them to be innocent -even utilit- arian -in origin, but you never can tell at night, after watching "Criminal-at-Large." All of which is saying I look upon "Criminal- at-Large" as one of the scariest and most expertly fashioned of its species. I liked its comedy, too, and underneath there is a sound psychological background. Its author, Edgar Wallace, was one of the best frighteners who ever wrote in the English lang- uage and he was at the top of his powers when he wrote this one. hursday - Friday - Saturday 3 ig Sfelling Days Clearance of Floor Sample FU VNITURE and a ost of Bargains throughout the Store 212-214 South Fourth Ave. Dial 8094 V -'--- -q q, A s 1,1,1 11111 11 Jm x _ _g ilw ll_ - IiI R IRR THE NOVEMBER IS 0UT TODAY -JI ~1 STUDENTS, VOTE DOWN WAR To learn that the University of Michigan stu- dent body has never taken a vote on the question of War comes to me with a feeling of surprise not unmingled with suspicion. I understand that this cumulative expression will be in order tomorrow.: Compared to three other educational institu- tions, I find constructive initiative on this campus below the average. There is rather too much ultra- conservatism, and the art of sententious speech- ifying. Everyone seems to be a compact unit con-- cerned with a narrow field of perspective. About War: first, students seem hazy about what it has cost, what it is costing, and what it will continue to cost, and how it is affecting us here and now. Daily, many worthy and capable American' youths are seeing academic careers permanently. closed to them. Many because of financial in- ability alone; thousands who are more worthy and capable than myself and others who now en- joy these students privileges will never see a Uni- versity campus as students. Why? Because of War and the fear of War only 15% of the tax budget of our country is used for constructive civic expenses. Calvin Coolidge said that the total cost of the World War "to you willl be more than 100 billion dollars, or about the pre- sent value of all the states west of the Mississippi. The ransom of an empire burned up in battle." Red Cross reports in thesstudy of safeguarding civilians against War states that,"to destroy the evil is to combat not this or that method of war- fare, but War itself!" Combatting War! Has our country done all in its power to do this! No. Even back in 1927 at the Geneva Naval Conference called by President Coolidge to stuff up loopholes left from the Wash- ington Conference of 1921-22, "the Conference spent most of its time arguing about the relative merits of large and small cruisers." At the unsuccessful Disarmament Conference meeting in February, 1933, President Arthur Henderson, at the outset, stated: "...today there exists a volume of opinion throughout the world which will support the Governments in any mea- Q111 of amrament vretion. however drastic, up- But They Don't Mean a Thing Unless a Lot of People are Yelling Come to the PEP MEETING FRIDAY NIGHT and give some volume to the cheering. The team will know that you are behind them if you make enough noise. I i I I Every Sports Writer in the country has proclaimed the Michigan-Minnesota game one of the sport highlights of the season. It is of primary importance to Michigan's chances for Conference Championship that she win this game Saturday. Help the team to be victorious by attending this giant Pep Meeting Friday Night in Hill Auditorium, to show them Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD Five men walked out of a mid-year exam at the University of Syracuse announcing their refusal to compete against cribbing that had taken place. The result was that the entire section was given a mark of incomplete. Because they violated all rules, and their "gen- eral attitude" toward upperclassmen was "im- proper," freshmen at Washington College have heen deprived for the year of the privilege of the extent of our support. I Aml