T HE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JA little girl's idea of a glorious ball, at which she is the central figure. The cast includes a king, a queen, the lord mayor, and a penguin. The pantomime, "Shepherd in the Distance," shows a pastoral scene replete with a vision, a princess, shepherds, a goat, and one ghurri-wurri, Variations in rhythmic patterns will be portrayed in the "Political Meeting." The recital will be open to the public. AT THE DETROIT WILSON "ALICE IN WONDERLAND"- A Review By JOHN W. PRITCHARD Color and music in dashing abandon marked the premiere of Eva Le Gallienne's "Alice in Won- derland" at the Wilson Theatre in Detroit Mon- day night. All the grotesqueries of fairyland- Alice's beloved fairyland - danced about the stage and sang Lewis Carroll's crazy lyrics, cavorting in charming fashion in many-hued and elaborate costuming. Faced with a great technical problem - that of making rapid backdrop and property shifts to pre- vent the many scenes in "Alice in Wonderland" from slowing up the action of the plan - Miss Le Gallienne has introduced a device upon which hangs the success or failure of the play. It is a scenic background which can be slid horizontally across the rear of the stage during a brief black- out -a continuous painting which behaves like a scroll. Result: success. In fact, most things about Miss Le Gallienne's "Alice" spell that delightful but rarely deserved word. The scenes are painted suggestively rather than realistically; the lighting effects are startl- ing, but in tone; and the whole effort to translate the audience from realism to a realm of plausible fantasy results in entire achievement. The combining of the "Wonderland" and "Through the Looking Glass" stories into one play is almost as difficult as the adaptation itself. All this was done by Miss Le Gallienne and Florida Friebus. The transition is done in this way: run- ning to escape the irate jack of cards, Alice simply runs into Wonderland. No interspersed mirror breaks up the sequence. The two stories become one: this method of writing, plus the movable backdrop, means that the audience, gotten into the spirit of the thing in part one, does not have to repeat the process in part two. Alice herself was a lovely little girl, excited, en- thusiastic, tripping through the play in whole delight. She was played by Josephine Hutchinson. The only flaw was a mature speaking voice which occasionally bore a lilt associated with ahat of a tragedienne; but the unfavorable impression at first conveyed wore off with time, a pleasurable anticipation of her descents into basso regions succeeding it. Possibly she was not Carroll's Alice -she lacked the calm matter-of-factness which was so quaint in the author's little girl -- but I have made this complaint about actors so often that perhaps I am too difficult to please. For the rest of the cast: the moralistic Duchess (Charles Ellis), the homicidal Queen of Hearts (William S. Phillips), the cockney Griffon (Nelson Welch), the lachrimose Mock Turtle (Lester Scharff), the persnicketty Red Queen (Leona Roberts), sententious Tweedledum and Tweedle- dee (Mr. Phillips and Staats Cotsworth), the ex- acting White Queen (Miss Le Gallienne), the inventious White Knight (Howard da Silva), and sardonical Humpty Dumpy (Walter Beck), gave peculiar delight. The Queen of Hearts distin- guished her (him) self by a piercing scream signi- fying desire for blood and the March Hare (Donald Cameron) should be cited for his sorrow- ful delivery of the line, "It was the best butteh." A comparison with the motion picture version is suggested. The play, in my opinion, is much the finer. Miss Le Gallienne will present additional per- formances of "Alice" this afternoon and tonight, tomorrow night, and at a Saturday matinee. She will play the title role in "Hedda Gabler" on Fri- day and Saturday nights. Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD Four marriages on the Howard Campus re- cently have led the dean of women of that institution to inaugurate a campaign among the women to induce them to "be careful while there is still time." Bl Stock up with OUTLINES FOR REVIEW - Complete Stock. FOUNTAIN PENS - $1.00 and Up. BLUEBOOKS-all sizes and rulings. at UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE STATE STREET THE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION presents Air Co mmodore Fellowes On the Subject: "TECONQU%' ES'T OFEVERES" with Motion Pictures HILL AUDITORIUM TOMORROW AT 8 PM. Tickets at WA -HS 75c ? 50c TIhe Mi"chi'gan Dai.'ly wVill, as, usual j)LlbliSh a From a question and answer Miami college paper: Question:: I never get any dates? I am an Answer: You answered your last column in the Why is it that A. O. Pi. letter, lady. p Ex 416h. I-t From the University of Montana Daily comes this editorial: "Wha'd ya get? the pertinent question that rep- resents a semesters work, a semesters wondering, and another grade harvest of either sorrowing or rejoicing for the student and his parents. One looks at his own low grades and thinks of the sincerity of work and effort he has put forth, then at the good grades of his neighbor whc cheated a little, apple-polished or soft-soaped a little, or else had a little "pull." At first it hurts because few mothers and dads understand. The college, coldly indifferent, refuses to understand. Then the superb thing called conscience comes to smother every disappointment, for it may be that conscience and God alone loves the honest worker. Then again one wonders how much his present troubles will affect his life ten years from now anyway." (What do you think?). Add this to your list of wisecracks: A man is known by the company he keeps and a woman by the company that keeps her. - Auburn Plainsman A recent survey revealed, after a questionnaire was sent to 17,127 students, that Stanford Uni- versity has the tallest co-eds, Smith the heaviest, and Texas University the slightest. A professor at the University of Illinois put this at the end of his final exam: "Tell which part of the course you liked best, but don't polish the * eatuaring both social ligfht and sidelio-hts fshi articles int detlcht dily official All * last but not least, a picture of the GRAND MARCH i