THE MICHIGAN DAILY MICHIGAN DAILY I i away from the gloomy, humdrum, city life they lead and give them a chance to build their minds' and bodies to healthy states out in the fresh air. We all want to help some of these boys get this opportunity, and the way to do it is to attend the All-Campus Jamboree Tuesday night in Hill Auditorium. It is an extraordinary drive for sup- port in that you will actually get more for your money than you would expect. Talent of all sorts has been recruited to furnish their services to this undertaking gratis and all prominent or- ganizations are lending their backing. If you go you will have an evening's entertain- ment that will be difficult to equal, and, in addi- tion, you will be making a contribution to human welfare. We urge all students and,.faculty members to lend their fullest support to this drive. All you have to do is round up the gang Tuesday night and come down to Hill Auditorium, assured that you will have a good time. And when you get ---a 1 Musical Events 3 I 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. JOHNSON TO RE SOLOIST WITH CADILLAC SYMPHONY EDWARD JOHNSON, eminent tenor of the Metropolitan Opera Association, and Ernest MacMillan, conductor of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, will appear with the Cadillac Sym- phony Orchestra Sunday, March 18, at 6 p.m., E.S.T., over the Blue Network of NBC. In pre- senting two of Canada's renowned musicians in the fourteenth of the Sunday symphonic recitals, the Cadillac Concerts continue to feature the world's most distinguished conductors and solo- ists. Mr. Johnson begins his program with the im- mortal Prize Song from Wagner's "Die Meister- singer," and continues his selections with two other greatly beloved operatic arias: the Flower Song from Bizet's "Carmen," and "How Cold Your Little Hand," from "La Boheme" of Puccini. COMING EVENTS All-campus Jamboree with special musical con- tributions by the Varsity Band, the Varsity Glee Club, and the Ukranian Choir from Detroit, Don't miss it. Screen Reflections 4 S I, 7 ..d ~ ~1 FIRST NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY 1:stab shed 1863 Oldest Notionol Bonk In Michigan Every Banking Service Avoilable Domestic - - - Foteign Under U. S. (overnment supervision Member Federal Reserve System H i l l Aud. I I Hear DR. FREDERICK B. FISHER every evening at 7:30 in a discussion of 1.11 vital problems of modern ulfe. ALBERT E. BUSS Soloist and song Leader FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A Community Cathedrai STATE AND WASHINGTON 50c Mar. 27 ALL-CAMPUS JAMBOREE J. FRED LAWTON $554ciadrt! F £ollcgiatt ryour ticket, you will know that you are making !.icia' O _ an investment in better citizenry-providing some boy with a chance to develop mentally and physi- MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS cally that otherwise might never come to him. The Associated Press is enchlsively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispathces credited to it or "_ - - ------ not otherwise credited in th paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special W ashrngtrvd nere trat ~the ost Ofice at Ann Arbor, M101iigZt, a X ashington vecond class matter. Special rate of postage granted by T'hird Amsistant Postmaster-General.c Sxsecrition during summer y carrier, $1.00: by mail, $1.50. Durin~g regtilar school year by carrier, $3.15; by ai,$..y mail, $4.25. Otices: Student Publicatibhs Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214.BySGRDAN Reprentatives: College Publications Representatives, By SIGRID ARNE In., 4G East Thirty-Fourth Street, New Yori: City 80 WASHINGTON (A') - The woman sitting next Boylson Street, ]Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, vtCheJuic CarsEanHgest Chicago.EDTRA AF to Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes at EITORIAL STAFF a dinner grew tired of calling him "Mr. Chief 'Teiephlone 492.' MANAGtNG EDITOR ..........THOMAS X. CONNELLAN Justice." EDIORIAL DIRECTOR ..........C. HART SCHAAF She smiled and asked if there were not some PRTY EDITOR...............ALBERWT H. NEWMN other title which would be just as proper, butI DR1AMA EDITOR...........JOHN W. PRITCHARD shorter. WOMEN'S EDITOR................CAROL J. HANAN T- - Mr. Hughes solemnly announced that precedent WGT EDITORS: A,.J . s alal, Ralph 0. Couter, Wlliam had been set by former Chief Justice Edward 0. Perris, John C. 7iealey, George Van VileekI, Guy M. Wbipple, Jr. Douglas White. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Artumr W. Car- It seems that at another dinner another woman stens, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Wetern. rebelled at "Mr. Chief Justice-ing." WOM tE'S A SIyTANT: Ma.jor f .Peck,lio i r Blum, "It's such a nuisance," she said. "What do Lols Jotter, Mtarl i Murp}ly, Marartet D. Phlanlil. your friends call you?" REPORTERS: C..Bradford Carpenter, Paul J. Elliott, j"Madam," said Justice White, "they call me Courtney A..Evans, John J. Flaherty, Thomas A. Groehn, I John Kerr. ThomasH .Xlt ene..* n Brr1 T. ro B eUY L AL r a S ,' I. Ii I AT THE MAJESTIC "THE WORLD CHANGES" ** I 1.11112, ill Sn. w i, zerna rs . evjck, D.avicl 0. Djaconald, Joel P.. Newman, John M. O'Connell, KennethiParker, William R. eed, Robert S. Ruiwitel, lA i- 9. 9ettle, Marshall D. Slverman. Arthur M. Dorothy les, Jen Ham i t r, I' lootnec harper, Eleanorj Jornsn, Ruth Loebs, Josepline McLean, Marjorie Moi- rison, Sally Phace, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider. BUSINESS STAfF r Telepbone 2-214 vusJfl31:S8 ;MANAGER ..........W. (iR~AP'ION 4SHARP OR IT MANAR .....A......FRNARD E. SIINACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER................. ..........CATHARINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGisS: rLocal Adlverti!Jing, Nol Tier- ner; Classified Advertising. Rus.il Read; Advriing service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Alen Kuui; Cire iu- tion and Contracts, Jack Efroymson. VICE PRESIDENT GARNER is smoking cigars which come done up separately in little wood- ell boxes. 3 , I (EPRESENTATIVE TINKHAM of Massachu- setts is still grumbling because he flew 12,000 miles last summer and gained neither of his two objectives, He wanted to bring home a Bengal tiger. And he wanted to ride along with a company of Japanese soldiers on a campaign. The tigers kept to cover when Tinklam hit AloSS KrmeS: Milton , il J Oglen, rlunad l)s- the jungle. And the J a p a n e s e governmentI t l, tJo., hutr lard , Clege Ath etrtof,. irowned on permitting a 64-year-old American Jane Basset, Virgii e, Mary hluraley, Peggy Ca. congressman to amble about, in a fighting zone. V' i n~ia 3Cirl, I-Th~l "ia 1Daly, (("l;v veF ld l ol uise 'ci'rz, Doris luimmy, Betty revc, lililie (irbim. ,I anct .arekson, ioiilie Rrusu.e, Barbara Morgan, Martu-ct I MuItard, Betty Simonds. ' AYOR LA GUARDIA of New York never per- mitted more than a one-line biography of FRESHMAN TRYOUTS: William Jackson, Louis Gold- himself in the Congressional Directory when he1 smith, David Schiffer, William Barndt, Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Robert Owen, Ted Wohlgemuth, Jerome was a member of the house. Grossman, Avner, Kronenbergcr, Jim Horiskey, Tom Clarke, Scott, Samuel Beckman, Hoer Lathrop, Hall, iHttman, John Park, Don Hutton, Allen Ulpson, hicharcl HE power of suggestion was demonstrated am- hlardenbrook, Gordon Cohn. I 'xha .i..,n. +hn. 1T Dn A NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE VAN VLECK The Judiciary Commitlee Opens The Door. .. M EETINGS of the Interfraternity Council's Judiciary Committee are to be open to anyone interested in attending, as the result of a recent action of the committee. We wish heartily to commend its members for realizing that it will secure more co-operation from the fraternities by killing the ogre of "dean's office control," which has been haunting the de- liberations of the Interfraternity Council. Whether or not the dean of students has in large measure dominated the actions of the Ju- diciary Committee in the past is a question which no one can answer except the members of the committee themselves. They have said that the undergraduate sentiment has been carefully con- sidered at all times, and that there has been no domination by the dean; we are inclined to be- lieve them. Therefore, we are happy to record the end of a period of insinuation which was caused by the secrecy, now removed. In the light of the im- portance of the actions which the committee is empowered to take, it is difficult to understand how the secrecy lasted as long as it did. We also hope that this will end a period of sus- picion on the part of the fraternities of the ob- jects which the dean has had in all his dealings with the fraternities. The objective has been to strengthen the syst m! at every turn, but to strengthen it through the "steadying hand of older counsellors." The fraternities want to be strong, too; but they believe that a symptom of that strength would be being allowed to run their houses ex-f actly as they please. There is no difference in the ends which the two have. There is a real difference in the means by which this common end is to be accomplished. We regard the end of secrecy for Judiciary Com- mittee meetings as the first step by which the dean and houses can stop suspecting each other and pull together to improve the situation now confronting fra ternities on the scholastic, the social, and the financial fronts. piy here wnen the NrA coce hnearings took place for the exterminating, fumigating and dis- infecting trade. William 0. Buettner, president of the indus- try's national organization, opened with an ad- dress detailing the work of the group. Before he was half through, many of his listen- ers were indulging, unconsciously, in a little scratching. W HETHER the gentlemen are aware of it or not, there is an increasing number of blonde waitresses in one of the dining rooms on capitol hill. The managerhas issued a flat order than when a brunette leaves she is to be replaced by a blonde. SENATOR ROBERT J. BULKLEY of Ohio at- tended a White House reception alone. As he entered the double line which forms to shakeE hands with the President he encountered Repre- sentative Mary Norton. Together they approached the announcer. "Name, please?" he asked. "Representative Norton," said the lady from New Jersey. Sweeping Senator Buckley with a blank gaze, the announcer said in loud, clear tones to the President: "Representative and Mrs. Norton." i i i I c I i E I I E t Orin Nordholm .............Paul Muni Anna Nordholm ...... Aline MacMahon Virginia.................Mary Astor A super-colossal, gigantic epic is what the movie press agents would call "The World Changes." It does attempt, in a Hollywood way, to be just that, but the results are a melodramatic con- coction that is mediocre, at times lurid, and far below the standard that a picture starring Paui Muni should maintain. The action of the story starts in 1850 in the Dakota Territory as Orin Nordholm, senior, and his wife, Anna, stop their covered wagon and de- cide to settle in a fertile plain and raise their about-to-be-born son. They are joined by other families, and eventually the town Qrinville is es- tablished. Their son grows up, becomes fired with ambition, and leaves town to take advantage of the opportunities offered in cattle trading. He eventualy becomes one of the greatest meat pack- ers in the country in Chicago. The plot con- tinues up to the present time, introducing tragedy after tragedy into the life of this phlegmatic old man whose children have all become wishy-washy social climbers. "The World Changes" contains a pot-pourri of scenes, characters. and incidents that are not very well organized and do not have the potency that is necessary to make a picture of its type ef- fective. Instead, it is tiring and ordinary. There are parts that are genuine and worth while, in- cluding some of the earlier scenes in the west and some in the portrayal of Orin's marriage life. There are moments of potentially good comedy, but instead of accentuating the main theme, they detract from it. Paul Muni d'eserves a good share of praise, because his characterization would be exceptional if he had not been the victim of bad direction. Aline MacMahon gives a good perform- ance both as the young pioneer and the old great- grandmother. Mary Astor, Guy Kibbee, and some of the other minor characters do well, although some of the other performances are nothing other than awful. If you like "Did You Ever See a Dream Walk- ing?" you had better stay away from the Para- mount Pictorial which gives a glimpse of its com- posers. And if you like Lillian Roth's hips and warble, deny yourself the agony of seeing her in the very bad short about song writing. We'll let you stay for the news reel, however, because, although there is nothing stirring or unusual in it, it is better than the other added attractions. -®C. B. C. AT THE WHITNEY "MASTER OF MEN" .A rvrrnMTNU PA I'M - ...._. _.. __... . _.____ __ ==--I I mmim .9 READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS ,... .. __ _ _ _ _ - State Street AIW CM& Min Street Easter Only One Week Awa Ifyou lave in mmd BOOKS, Devotional or Otherwise We shall be happy indeed to show you what our two large stores have to offer- BIBLES OF EVERY VERSION (King James, American Standard, Moffatt, Scofield, Smith, Goodspeed trans- latoil anid also the Short Bible) - PRAYER BOOKS and HYM- NAIS, TESTA MEN TS, etc., etc. At i xcel1ent Assortment of Easter Greeting Cards FOUR DAYS MAY 9-10-11-12, 1934 SIX CONCERT LA RS HILL AUDITORIUM SECRETARY ICKES' love of flowers is so well known that the bureau of parks, one of the divisions of his interior department, supplies his desk daily with fresh bouquets -usuall red roses. As Others See It THE PROFESOR AND 11E PUPIL Why should relationships between the profes-1 sc0r and the student be formal outside of the class- room? ''This is a question asked by many ob- servers of University life. Why, say these indi- viduals, should a professor constantly retain a classroom relationship toward the members of his class? Many answers are possible. The chief one given is that the professor must keep up a dignified front to maintain student respect, and that he is also apt to lose the respect of other faculty mem- bers if he becomes too friendly with undergradul- ates. This answer would prove adequate if it were not for the fact that some professors do maintain a friendly relationship with students and are usually considered the most popular professors on Buck Garrett ............... Jack Holt Kay Walling ................ Fay Wray "Master of Men" tells of the rise of Buck Gar- rett from the position of a "hunky" in a steel mill to the presidency of the corporation, a la Nick Carter. In this case, however, the hero gets taken down a few pegs before the final close-up. Buck leads his fellow workers in demanding bet- ter working conditions. It seems ironic to this re- viewer that the workers here are shown to be perfectly satisfied with -an eight hour day and a six day week. I do not quite follow Director Lambert Hillyer's ideas about the aspirations and desires of the worker of today. Intentionally or not, labor is portraye dunsympathetically, the type either being drunk or lazy. This film will manage to hold the interest and emotions of a certain type of movie goer, but it will not appeal to the more intelligent who know the worker and who also know Wall Street. Al- though the story is simply constructed and at times very unreal, the acting assignments are quite adequately taken by Fay Wray, Walter Con- nolly, and 'T'heodore Von Eltz. Miss Wray is ex- ceedingly pretty and dreamy. Jack Holt is getting fat and clumsy. He shouldn't attempt love roles any more. On a horse he might get by, but in the drawing room or office he is awkward and misplaced. -J. C. S. So Gen. Johnson says he wants criticisms. This dispels any idea that the General has been sub- scribing to a clipping service. For the collector of curiosities: The nation's smallest postollice, a 10 by 20 structure, stands at Large, Pennsylvania.j PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT Earl V. Moore, Musical Director Eric DeLomarter, Associate Conductor Frederick Stock, Orchestra Condtctor Juvd l4igbee, Young People's Conductor LUCREZIA BORi. ............. .................. Soprano Metropolitan Opera Association ROSAPONSELLE......................................Soprano Metropolitan Opera Association JEANETTE VREELAND....................... Soprano American Concert and Oratorio Singer COE GLADE...............................Contralto Chicago Civic and other Operas PAUL AILTHOUSE................ ... ....... . Metropolitan Opera Association ARTHUR HACKETT... . ............... ... . American Opera and Concert Singer THEODORE WEBB. .......................... American -Oratorio Singer CHASE BAROMEO ... .... . . .. . .. . . . .. . ... Chicago, LoScalo, and South American Operas GU ILA BUSTABO.......................... Young American Virtuoso .. Tenor .. Tenor Baritone Bass Violinist MSCHA LEVITI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Distinguished Russian Ployer MA BEL ROSS RHEAD... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Choral Union Accompanist PA L MER CHRISTIAN.................. University of Michigan Organist .. Pianist ...Pianist Organist I Le.t's Give Tie Ki, A Break .. . P ERHAPS you have never wanted to go to a summer camp, or per- haps you have been able to get out on a lake The University Choral Union 300 Voices The Stanley Chorus 40 Voices Chicago Symphony Orchestra .70 players Ninth Symphony .- .-.-.-Beethoven Young People's Festival Chorus 400 Voices The Seasons-- -----Haydn An--..irr rp sr- t.. ta r:Anv arr %thPA ThoIm 1tl1 A,,-r:.Iirrsic I1