THE MICHIGAN DAILY GAN DAILY NI I, R i A-1~. ter judgment in her choice. It was generally pretty good, but petered out in a bit of bjurry syrup at the final curtain. "No Man's Land", in 1932, was a mediocre show, mildly entertaining because of enthusiastic production, but weakened by a loose plot. The women on campus, the play informed us, decided to take things in their own hands and banish men fron the campus; but the wily men finessed the queen and demon- strated that love; after all, is the dearest thing. Nothing has ever quite convinced me that the first part of this play was not insidious propa- ganda. "Love on the Run," in 1933, was one of the most startling things I have seen in campus musical comedy. There were touches in it that were worthy of a Broadway impressario. It got away from the campus incubus. It took the hero and heroine all over the world in an effort to popularize chewing gum. It was stylism raised to a high pitch; it was, in fact, a precedent. What effect last year's play will have on "Gang's All There" will be evident tonight when the current comedy opens. LEG SHOWS The director of "Gang's All There" gives the low- down on what's happened to musical comedy right under our very noses. By RUSSELL McCRACKEN ,l Rn o rs m s e . - - 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 Association and the Big Ten News Service. ssociated oU#e iate kros' ~ ;1933 i N AJTWINAL - Qtriir) 1934'-z MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispathces credited to it or not otherwise credited in thb 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, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. Offices: Student Publicaticas Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michilgan. Phone: ,2-124,., Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 4C Bast Thirty-Fourth: Street, Ne'~ YQrtl City; 80 Boylson Street, Boston;r612 Nort, Michiana Avenue, Chicago., EDITORIAL STAFF Teleph~one 4925. MANAGING EDITOR .........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR...... ...C. IART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR....................RAC T E AW SPORTS EDITOR. ......... ... ALBERT HI, NEWM,~AN DRAMA EDITOR.. ............ .,JOHN W. PRITCHARf WOMEN'S EDITOR.................. CAIOL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, William G. Ferris, John C. Healey, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Arthur W. Car- stens, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western.t WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: 2arjorie Beck, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. . REPORTERS: C. Bradford Carpenter, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaherty,, Thomas A. Groehn, John Kerr, Thomas H. Kleene, Bernard A. Levick, David G. MacDonald, Joel P. Newman, John M. O'Connell, Kenneth.Parker, William R. .Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Arthur S.. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, Arth r 2. Taub. Dorothy Gles,,Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean. iMrlorfr.Mor- rison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Jane 8cl'~elicr. BUSINESS STAFF' Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ... .....W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER..........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER................. ........ ..............CATHARINE MP HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Noel Tur- ner; Classified Advertising, Russell ead; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circula- tion and Contracts, Jack Efroymson. ASSISTANTS: Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Ros- enthal, Joe Rothbard, George Atherton. Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Virginia Cluff, Patricia. Daly, Genevieve Field, Louise Florez, Doris Gimmy, Betty Greve, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Louise Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret Mustard, Betty Simonds. FRESHMAN TRYOUTS: William Jackson, Louis Gold- smith, David Schiffer, William Barndt, Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Robert Owen, Ted Wohigemuth, Jerome Grossman, Avner, Kronenberger, Jim Horiskey, Tom Clarke, Scott, Samuel Beckman, Homer Lathrop, Hall, Ross Levin, Willy Tomlinson, Dean Asselin, Lyman Bittman, John Park, Don Hutton, Allen Ulpson, Richard Hardenbrook, Gordon Cohn. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN C. HEALEY Voij&I Primacy or F~ascist %Italy. * . SO IN SIXTY YEARS Fascism is to become the chief political power of the world. Mussolini, in a speech sev- eral days ago, predicted that Italy under Fascist rule will extend into Asia and Africa, grow more powerful at home, and by the twenty-first cen- tury be greatest of nations. ' - If Mussolini had predicted world primacy for Italy in one decade instead of six there would be mtich more probability than there is that his prophecy would come true. Italy, ruled by a dic- tator, canaccomplish much. But like all dictator- ships, when the'dictator dies she is bound to suffer. lo one { can argue against the efficiency of a governm2ent in which one man is all-powerful. A Mussolini or a Hitler or a Stalin give a gov- evnment unity otherwise impossible. But the price of their passing must be chaos. The essence of a -dictatorship is universal obedience and acceptance, which is poor train- ing for the government that will be necessary after the ruler dies. If any people achieve and hold world primacy in the twenty or twenty first century, it will not be via a dictatorship - fascist, communist, or any other kind. sv The Theatre ANOTHER J. G. P.? HOW DELICIOUS' By JOHN W. PRITCHARD HAVE HEARD rumors to the effect that thc Junior Girls' Plays have in most cases been better than the Union Operas. Of course, this statement will be reversed when I write an ad- vance for "With Colors Flying." But there is no denying the fact that, after twenty-odd years of' handling the J.G.B. technique from generation to generation, the junior women are approaching the atmosphere of professionalism that is so necessary for an audience of collegiate pseudo- sophisticates. It is therefore with much interest that I look forward to reading Carol Hanan's review of "Gang's All There" in Thursday morning's Daily, and to seeing the show at first hand that night - the result of which will be a column of rather pointless soliloquy on the affair, because a second f nrtA rntria, n nn mil.41hp fif iloQIRi nl ' R. cq cll A COUPLE of years back the free and accepted Masons brought to this town (for the purpose of paying off the building debt on their archi- tectural monstrosity down on Fourth Avenue) a Russian burlesque show called "Blue Bird." It was very poorly advertised. The title scared away whatever burlesque-minded audience the town might have provided. Those up on campus who heard about it thought it was Materlinck's play done in Russian, and somehow couldn't bring themselves to a trip to the Temple, even for art. And its being a football week-end, they settled back those Friday and Saturday 'nights to their cocktails of alky and canned grapefruit juice (yes, we drank alky in those days). So "Blue Bird" went away even as it had come, unheralded, unwept-for. Nobody was any the wiser. Except, perhaps, the business managers, who upon counting the 98th person to go by the gate at 8:45 must have resolved pretty firmly against Russians and Blue Birds' I saw this show. I was the ninety-and-nine. I didn't go through the gate. Being an under- graduate in those days, I worked "crew" on all the traveling shows hitting town that I could pos- sibly chizzle a job on. The pay was sort of good. It staved off that hurt look in my landlady's eye. I saw "Blue Bird" from the wings of the Masonic Temple stage. It was swell. It was so swell, and I was so excited, I went to Fred Rebman after the matinee and told him I couldn't work the other performances. I wanted to see the others from the front. "Blue Bird" was never intended for the Ma- sonic Temple stage, which is only about 12 feet deep with a procenium opening of 2 feet. Half the numbers had to be done' with "set pieces" against black drapes, the hanging pieces being too large to "fly." Some numbers were done with almost no scenery, the stage was so small. But in spite of all the technical handicaps, "Blue Bird" was still one of the swellest things I've seen on the stage. It was something new and different in a musical revue. It was bellowing, boisterous, and poundy from beginning to end. The ideas of the comedy were quaint and droll. But the vital- ity, enthusiasm, and energy of its players, I've never seen the like of. It made you feel hellishly good to be alive. It made you want to go out and start a grand revival of good old-fashioned romp- er-kicking comedy. I went home after each per- formance wanting to start a movement - a move- ment against comedies of drawing-room bicker- ing and dramas of the "Madame X" sort. "Blue Bird" was a stylized production. In the theatre, when you say a production is stylized, you mean that the producers have made mode, man- ner, and idea the important thing. A stylized production is often contrasted to an atmospheric one, where the effect aimed at is one of mood and feeling. In a stylized production one leaves reality behind, one goes out to get the liie, 'pos- ture, word that is particular to a person or time. One exaggerates this line, posture,'word, aiming at a broad, direct, simple expression. One respects this simple expression' rhythmically -harps on it, pounds it home for all the dramatic effect pos- sible. It is a difficult job finding the right particular, for stylization requires a good deal of thought. A good deal of arguing would go into the ar- ranging of a ballet, for example, which would try to find the particular lines, words, and postures that would best express the sentimentality of Na- poleonic France. I can see very 'easily how a choreagrapher or a director might have many knock-down, drag-'em-outs before any selection at all might be made. All this is just to shove that a good deal of thought goes into a piece of stylized theatre. Stylization indicates thought, criticism, point of view. This point of view re- garding the manners 'and modes of the subject under treatment is dove-tailed in the wi'iting, di- recting, designing, and dancing. "Blue Bird" was a stylized show. It was bur- lesque. It was a series of skits on many different foibles and sentimentalities of Continental life. It was something new and different in Ann Arbor. I was one out of 99 in Ann Arbor Who saw it (and I, remember, went twice), What has all this to" do with -? Simply this A few years before "Blue Bird" came to Ann Ar- bor, Balief came to New York with a burlesque troupe of the same sort. It was called "Chauve Souris." It was something new and different in theatre. It wasn't well advertised. Those were the days of prosperity and tired business men. When you went to musical comedies, you wanted legs - sheer kimonos -sex with a blackout. The story didn't matter, the scenery didn't matter, the music didn't matter. As long as th° dances put legs and keen little figures to advantage, dances didn't matter. The same straight-line routines could be used over and over. Nobody cared. As to costumes, well, the less of them the Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be con- strued as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. THE SWASTIKA To the Editor: What is true of the buffoonery as regards "Aryan race" or "pure race", has its counterpart in the adoption of the mystic emblem of the Swastika. According to a recent pamphlet by Dr. W. Norman Brown, professor of Sanskrit at the University of Pennsylvania and a leading Orien- talist, the claim of Adolf Hitler and his followers that the Swastika, Nazi party emblem, is the his- toric property of the Aryan people and that it has a Christian significance has no historical basis. It was not invented by the Indo-Europeans, i. e. Aryans, who did not know the swastika until 1000 years after the time of the earliest pre- served specimens . . . "The present Nazi claims the untenable. Just as their theory of Aryan racial purity is fanciful, so too, their use of the Swastika as an Ayro-Christian symbol, with as- pects of anti-Judaism, anti-pacifism and anti- Marxism, is entirely arbitrary. The term Aryan or Indo-European signifies nothing of race in- tegrity and only a relative degree of cultural uniformity, while the Swastika is far too ancient and general a human property to bear their lim- ited construction." A student of present day Germany is com- pelled to reach the conclusion that the whole structure of Nazism is based on (Nazism,) fraud, deceit, trickery, violence, injustice and falsehood. Emotion instead of reason and common sense, plays the principal role in this monstrous bar- barism by which the German people have been completely taken it. The following passage is from E. A. Mawrer's interesting book: Germany Puts the Clock Back: "The great novelist Thomas Mann' has publicly but vainly protested against the cult of emotion and irrationality that has laid hold of the Ger- man brain. Thinking with one's blood became steadily more popular. For thus the yoke of hard fact could be lifted and subjective aspiration take wing." - M. Levi Screen Reflections .AT THE WHITNEY DOUBLE FEATURE "FIGHTING LADY" George Davis...............Jack Mulhall Dora Hart...............Peggy Shannon ** "AIRMAIL" Ralph Bellamy ................. Pat O'Brien Lillian Bond ..................Gloria Stuart.. "Airmail" has played in town before, about a year ago, but is being reshown at the Whitney because the recent sensational news revelant to the crashing of emergency army mail planes has brought the question of airmail back to the front pages. The film is well photographed save for a snow- storm which is obviously artificial. The story is dramatic enough, although it is slightly spoiled by a rash, heroic hokum that Hollywood wishes onto its leading characters. Pat O'Brien, Ralph Bellamy, Lillian Bond, Leslie Fenton, Gloria Stuart, and Slim Summer- ville portray their parts as sincerely as the plot and the dialogue permit. Many of the air scenes are breath-taking. I suppose the film merits two stars because of the guidance of John Ford, one of America's finest directors, but this reviewer would like to see, just for once, a story that would give its characters a chance to be living human beings instead of actors. "The Fighting Lady" masquerades under the name of cinematic entertainment. It is not very heroic to tear apart something which is already in bad shape. I suppose the kindest thing would have been to pass it up in silence. "The Fighting Lady" has none of the elements necessary in a worth while motion picture. Its characters speak their lines but do not act. The dialogue and plot are as void of logic as is a fish trying to climb a telegraph pole. This film did not take much money to produce; whatever little it did take was wasted. -- JC.S. Musical ENvents NO ORGAN RECITAL TO-DAY THE organ recital previously scheduled for this afternoon has been cancelled. Next week there will be a program of Good Friday Music on Friday afternoon, instead of Wednesday. who pronounce theatre - thee-ahh-ter - sat back on their mohair davenports, and said - Thank God, for the depression. It was death to the leg show. Not knowing where to turn, Broadway turned to art. It fell on the stylization of those Russian revues of several years back, on "Chauve Souris," on "Blue Bird." "Walk a Little Faster" of last year, "As Thousands Cheer" of this, are shows of this sort. Doris Humphreys, who a few years ago was thought queer and arty, now has her ideas used in the high places. An effort is seen in the way of giving the different crafts brought together in the production of a musical comedy some sort of unity. Music means something as related to the dancing. Costumes mean something as re- lated to the scenery. The old leg stuff has given way to an intelligent show. A noted speaker was scheduled to speak at the University of Missouri on "The Romance of Be- -Associated Press Photo German crowds are shown here hailing Adolf Hitler, German chancellor, as he was enter- ing the Kroll Opera house for a giant Nazi demonstration. In the upper left, he i sh vlon addressing the meeting. Being an Associated Press lewspaper, the Midh- igan Daily is able to bring to you the curren news of both national and international inherestq Riots in France . .. ivi War in Austri. .. unrest in Germnany . .. Italy's preparations . .. Russia alert for action on thle Japanese border . . . all Ihese brought to you through the compgetency of the Associated Press and thr-ough the Michigan Daily. The Michigan lDaily has the acdvantage of being in close contact with well-kown authorities on tis subject who give their opinions to the public through the media of this newspaper. These men on this campus have been asked by the President for their advice in handling the mechanism of Not since the year 1918, has the world news held suchwideinterest for Aniericans. Every day brings new (lvelopfllenlts in the aniazig world . e ese, need a paper Ce~ 1b ilhgan Daily for- thie TRUE news, a ape with an unbised viewpoint. SUBSCRIBE TO1DAY $2.00 for the IReimaining Weeks .. .y" :Crtt'>: lna aj ii The Michigan Daily brings you the News the Morning After.... AsT- eWo rid ; .. A" I