THE MICHIGAN DAILY -AN DAILY of the father, and his performance has been com- pared to some of Emil Jannings' best. Adapted from the French novel by Jules Re-' nard, which appcarcd in France about 20 years About Books I .. - " ." ago and which has since become a classic, "Poil de Carotte" has been directed by Julien Duvivier, whose reputation as a director ranks with that of Rene Clare as the most enviable in France. The French dialogue has been made completely understandable to the non-French speaking mem- bers of the audience by the superimposition of subtitles accurately translated into English. "Poll de Carotte" has enjoyed international ac- claim, having run for more than a year in Paris ublished every morning except Monday during the versity year and Summer Session by the Board in trol of Student Publications. [ember of the Western Conference Editorial Association the Big Ten News Service. -1933 (m.0 -ION - f covsrxacE 16 34 - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'e Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use republication of all news dispathees credited to it or otherwise credited in thi; paper and the local news lished herein.All rights of republication of special atches are reserved. ntered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as nd class matter. Special rata of postage granted by d Aistant Postmaster-General. lbscriltion during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, . During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by , $4.25. ices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Arbor, Michigan. Phone. 2-1214. presentatives: Colege Publications Representatives, 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 son Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, ago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 IAGING EDITOR........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN TORIAL DIRECTOR............C. HART SCHAAF Y E~DITOR........... ...........BRACKLEY SHAW RTS EDITOR.. ..... .....ALBERT H. NEWMAN .MA EDITOR............JOHN W. PRITCHARD MEN'S EDITOR.....................CAROL J. HANAN HT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, William Ferris, John C. Healey, George Van Vleck, Guy M. bipple, Jr. RTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Arthur W. Car- ns, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie estern.; IEN'S ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Beck, Eleanor Blum,] Is Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. ORTERS: C. Bradford Carpenter, Ogden G. Dwight, ,ui J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Thomas E. Groehn, rin Kerr, Thomas H. Kleene, Richard E. Lorch, David Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth ParkEr, Wil-f mn R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Robert J. St. Clair, thur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, Arthur M.C :rothy Gles, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper. Marie aid, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, arjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Kathryn letdyk, Jane Schneider. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 INES MANAGER.............W. GRAFTON SHARP DIT MANAGER ............BERNARD E. SCHNACKE MENS BUSINESS MANAGER . .. .....Y .................... CATHARINE MC HENRY ARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- lck; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising ntracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert ard; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- Ryxuson. ISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dnakin, Milton Kra- er, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, ,mes Scott, David Winkworth. Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, rgnia Cluff, Patricia Daly, Genevieve Field, Louise orez, Doris Gimmy, Betty Greve, Billie Griffiths, Janet ukson, Louise Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret :ustard, Betty Simonds. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN C. EALEY ndergraduate Counec, akes A False Step.. . T 4E RESOLUTION of the Under- graduate Council freeing freshmen n wearing pots is a ludicrous piece of legisla- I i the light of the true situation. .e pot question is decided in the meetings of fraternities of the campus in regard to their Iges. The majority of idependents do not r pots. ven a body as close to the fraternities as the rfraternity 0ouncil' has found that it has no Mute power over the Wearing of pots, that it only pass resolutions asking all presidents to >perate in enforcing the tradition. The presi- ts in many cases d' not have a control of the ter, which is usually decided by a majority of the houses. .he passage of a resolution about pots by the Lergraduate Council smacks' strongly of the otent student Council of last year. It might as well pass a resolution that all fraternity a should wear coats and vests at dinner as to invade the fraternity jurisdiction on the ter of pots. oily News es The Light. HE ANN ARBOR DAILY NEWS is to be commended for its clear- ted editorial last night on Sunday closing of library. What it says is a ,complete reinforce- t of our position. he Daily News: "It seems to us that the cart efore the horse in this matter of granting the of the library if the students will pay for it. dents should not be asked to raise $375 to ay expenses, or any other sum." re agree fully with this viewpoint. It is un- unate and illogical that students should be le to make an extra appropriation of this na- , .Yet it appears that such will be necessary if library is to be opened. Since it apparently not be opened in any other way, the students t contribute to the present drive. creen Reflections ['CINEMA .LEAGUE ESENTrS "POlL DE CAROTTE" before it came to New York for 10 successful weeks at the Europa theatre. It ranks with such pictures as "Potemkin," "Maedchen in Uniform," and "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari." Unlike some of the Art Cinema League presentations which have been obviously and admittedly of a propa- gandist nature, this is an intimate, human story which has an exceptionally strong appeal for par- ents. Because of its frankness in dealing with adolescent problems, the League has advised that children should not see it, but they will not be refused admittance. -C. $. C. Musical Events TODAY'S ORGAN RECITAL Fantasie in F....................... Mozart Aria.... ...................... Handel (from 10th Concerto for Organ and Orchestra) B-minor Prelude and Fugue.........Bach' Variations .........................Liszt (on the Theme: Weinen, Klagen, Angst und Not) Aux Etoiles ........................Duparc Elfes ...........................Bonnet En Bateau .....................Debussy Study on an English Folk-Tune.....Milford Carillon Sortie ...................... Mulet THE ENORMOUS ROOM, by E. E. Cummings. New York: The Modern Library (1934), $ .95. -A Review. By JOHN W. PRITCHARD MR. CUMMINGS is noted in the world of letters for an obscure, apparently insane hodge-podge of meaningless phrases, which is really a variant of dadaism. "The Enormous Room," however, con- tains only scattered fragments of this type of writing. The book in question is a lucid expose of life in a prison camp during the war: that it is a true story is attested by an introduction by the author's father. But it is not merely an expose: it is more; it is a study of characters, men and women confined in a prison and thus stripped of the superficialities that hide intrinsic value. Says the author, in prefatory dialogue: "Doesn't The Enormous Room really concern war? "It actually uses war: to explore an inconceiv- able vastness which is so unbelievably far away that it appears microscopic. "When you wrote this book, you were looking through war at something very big and very far away? "When this book wrote itef, I was observing a negligible portion of something incredibly more distant than any sun; something more unimagin- ably huge than the most prodigious of all uni- verses- "Namely? "The individual." First published in 1922, the book has been con- sidered of sufficient worth to be incorporated in the Modern Library, along with Homer, Virgil, Ibsen, France, Balzac, Fielding, James Joyce, and others of all ages. The question confronting a critic at this point, twelve years after the book's first appearance, must be whether the evaluation is correct. Unmistakably it is correct. And this is the more remarkable, because the story is a medley of literary experience and inexperience, of awkwardness and artistry; its author was very young. He is already evincing a distrust of literary convention which later made him one of the most obscure of the disciples of Dada. Yet, by means of completely unscrupulous twisting and straining of the language to suit his own ends, Cummings evolves- a series of character sketches which are stark and permeating. The book is pervaded by a delightful species of wit which is often subtle and which may or may not be cynical. His filthy prison room is con- trasted with portions of the outside world, and is found to be preferable to many of his past situa- tions. It is not, of course, the room which is so won- derful; it is the people in it. These people are brought together chiefly from the viler classes of humanity. Many of them are themselves vile, but all are interesting. Most of the writer's energy is expended on a description of a few individuals who because of their astounding personal quali- ties, are called "The Delectable Mountains." Is there a theory evolved from all this character study? There is - and it is the key to all of Cumming's subsequent writing -- but it is slipped into the book near the end, so devoid of positive statement, that one has to think back and under- stand the single fact motivating his choice of the people who were to be Delectable Mountains. He speaks of his hope that eventually educational realism will be "annihilated by that vast and painful process of Unthinking which may result in a minute bit of purely personal feeling. Which minute bit is Art." Purely personal feeling, he says - and then we realize that The Wanderer, Zoo-loo, Surplice, and Jean le Negre, the four mountains of delight, were men who were extra- ordinar, sensitive -who communica'ted them- selves to the feelings rather than to the intellect. And this, after all, is the essence of the dadaism of Mr. Cummings, the dadaism which came later but is vaguely perceptible in "The Enormous Room." For he is penning his envoi to the description of Jean le Negre. He says, "-Boy, Kid, Nigger with the strutting 'muscles - take me up into your mind once or twice before I die (you know why: just because the eyes of me and you will be full of dirt some day). Quickly take me up into the bright child of your mind, before we both go suddenly all loose and silly (you know how it will feel). Take me up (carefully; as if I were a toy) and play carefully with me, once or twice, before I and you go suddenly all limp and fool- ish. Once or twice before you go into great Jack roses and ivory - (once or twice Boy before we together go wonderfully down into the Big Dirt laughing, bumped with the last darkness).," Intellectually this passage loses grip: it be- comes obscure, mystic. But it is turgid with emo- tion: it is blinding when the eyes of the mind are closed and the soul is allowed to stare un- shaded. It is the emotions which Mr. Cummings chiefly seeks to move - with his pictures of won- derful child-people, mature children, dirty but lovable. Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD The co-eds at one of the co-operative cottages at Ohio State University are putting in frantic calls to the university department these days try- ing to find out definitely if that department re- quires homework of its students. Last week a new girl moved in with them. At dinner the first night of her stay, one of the residents, in an attempt at sociability, popped the inescapable, "What course are you taking?" Came the reply, "Embalming and funeral di- recting." You just can't help seeing red everytime you look at the average co-ed's lips. From the University. of Minnesota comes the ro-nrt+h+t a. n-Pinot g+ e+inga anng o w manin akies. Another LI-34C APPEARANCE Notie uis Colorful Presence in the Sl To Sae~moro That Crafty Little Devil iTS T HREE NAMES that are not ordinarily asso- ciated with organ literature appear on this afternoon's recital, those of Mozart, Liszt, and Debussy. The Liszt Variations belong to the organ field, while the Fantasie and En Bateau are tran- scriptions. Bach and Handel were both famed organists of their day, though Handel's fame was wider; Handel absorbed an Italian melodic mannerism, while Bach's technique has been the basis for all' great modern composition. The two styles of writing by these contemporaries will be evident in their works on the program. -S. P. PIATGORSKY CONCERT In Review Thc young Russian 'cellist's performance can be qualified by all the musical cliches in any re- viewer's vocabulary that express admiration. But there was in last night's performance something more than a "warmth of tone," "command of technique," "careful phrasing," "contrast of dy- namics," and so on. These cliches become some- what platitudinous, as a matter of fact, although at the same time they acquire veracity: breadth of feeling, violin sweetness, plasticity - these be- come self-explanatory upon hearing Piatigorsky play. In fact there wasn't any technique, it was all easy. There was a human interest, local color, individuality, intimacy, a concentration in re- leasing the charm and music of the program. The Italian "Sonata," by Caporale, "flowed." Both it and the Bach Suite for Cello alone were dis- tinct in their ideas, clear in the contrasts of dance movements. The Bach was beautifully rhythmic, created with graduations in tonal shadings and tonal qualities, from double stops in the Sara- bande to the portamento in the Gavotte. The encore played here, the first movement of the Bach C-Major Suite, brought bass resonance toI the fore. The Weber Sonatine, ingratiating, in- troduced the more relaxed mood of romanticism, which was carried on in the Saint-Saens Con- certo. The power and strength, the agility (do you see how the cliches come easily?) the sure- ness of fingering ensured the intention to make this pliant and gracious. The Chopin Nocturne in C-sharp minor, was outstanding in the last group, a pastel. The "Ho- pak" and "Zapateado" lived with imagination, while the "Intermezzo" of G r a n a d o s sang from the heart. Akin to this was the first en- core, Valse Sentimentale of Tschaikowski; The Flight of the Bumble-bee, of Rimsky Korsakow, sped with humor and busy-ness. Piatigorsky built his program in a musical mood, in a sentimental mood, and sympathetic. He nlavet1 it likewise in a friendly way, with no haut- Qay Sring Makesa Dramatic Entrance by Making a Personal Appearance at T'he Leage Spring Fashion Sh:)ow x Friday Afternoon The MICHIGAN DAILY 'will publish a Spring, i Fashion Supplement Friday. This edition will contain authentic style articles as well as displaying the New Spring Apparel offered by Ann Arbor's Leading Merchants. ,WM'fllMp -