THE MICHIGAN DAILY a i THE MICHIGAN DAILY I f 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 tie Big Ten News Service. -- 13cniaod c mkit 1934 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusvely entitled to the use for republication of 'all news dispathces credited to it or not otherwise credited in thi; 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 Tbird Assistant Postmaster-General. Saibscrip'tion during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. nai4es:Student Publicaticns Building, Maynard Street, Anti Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Tn.,4 East Thirty-Founrth Street, New York City; 80 Boy on Street, Boston; 612. North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGIN'G EDITOR .. .......THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR............C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDI2TOR......................BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS EDITOR................... ALBERT H. NEWMAN DRAMA DITOR...................JOHN W. PRITCHARD WOMEN'S EDITOR.....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, William 0. Ferris, John C. ealey, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whiipple, Jr. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Arthur W. Car- st11en, 2Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Marjorie 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 err, Thomas H. Kleene, Bernard B. Levick, David G. MacDonald, Joel P. Newman, John M. O'Connell, Kenneth IParkcr, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Arthur $. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, Arthur M. Taub. Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, Marjorie Mor- rison, Sally Placc, osalie Resnick, Jane Schneider. I BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGE.R . . BERNARD E. SCHNACKEX W...N'S BSIN.SS MA.AGER...................... .."."........... CATHAR.INE MCHENRY] DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Noel Tur- ner; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Serviee,Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circula- tioni and Contracts, Jack Efroymson.l ASSISTANTS: Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Ros- enthal, Joe Rothbard, George Atherton.C Jane. Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bursiey, Peggy Cady, Virginia Cluff, Patricia Daly, Genevieve Field, Louise Flore7,-DorisIxrn~y, Betty Orevc,.Fillle Griffiths. Janet Jackson, 'Louse Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret Mustard, Betty Simonds. of Michigan, is more concerned with loading u the mind of the student with various and unre- lated trifles than it is with giving him a thorough understanding of a few related subjects. He dis- cusses at length the difference between these two types of teaching, and is obviously of the opinion that the latter is superior. In sum, Mr. Roberts argues that the crying need of American education is to co-ordinate within the student the basic, fundamental concepts of learning, and to let him work out the rest for himself with a mini- mum of instruction from above. Thus far we agree with him; but, however flat- tered we are at Michigan's being chosen as the subject for this inquiry, we are not convinced that the University of Michigan is typical of American higher education. Under the leadership of Presi- dent Ruthven, a man who is both far-seeing and scientifically minded, we are engaged in a series of experiments to find how the best in education may be achieved. During his five years as head of the University, President Ruthven, with the aid and guidance of departmental heads, has undertaken to remove the stigma of "intellectual inertia" which Mr. Roberts notes. To cite one of many examples, there is the concentration program, the true worth of which will not be seen until all students in the literary college are under its requirements. This program, it is planned, will give one a deep rather than a shallow education; will give one a thinking mind rather than a storehouse of irrel- evant and widespread facts. This, then, is our chief criticism of Mr. Roberts' article. He has, evidently, inquired concerning Michigan's educational methods, but he has not sought to find out her aims. He has based his opinion on what he has heard from students, seemingly without seeking to supplement this knowledge from more authoritative guides. A cursory examination will also show several minor slips. In discussing the prerequisites for a bachelor's degree in journalism, he seems to have arbitrarily chosen them from the literary college catalogue, and those he lists are merely in the mechanics of journalism. These courses, he says, are all that are necessary for a degree. Yet he fails to mention, or is ignorant of the fact, that a detailed and closely related study must be made of political science, economics, sociology, and kin- dred subjects before one can obtain a degree in journalism from Michigan. He mentions "the Col- lege of Literature, Science, and Arts, known to every undergraduate as the Lit College." We sus- pect Mr. Roberts of inventing that detail, for within the memory of man the colloquialism has always been the "Lit. School." He describes "the main street of Ann Arbor as running past Angell Hall." Evidently Mr. Roberts failed to travel west of Division during his sojourn among us. His lack of vision is also noticeable when he mentions the number of bookshops in town, which he places at two. Off-hand we can count eight in the imme- diate campus area alone. In relating his interviews with various students, he writes that he talked to those who are known as B.M.Q.C.'s and to men who pay a dollar a week for their rooms in boarding houses, using the terms antithetically. There is no artistocracy of wealth at Michigan, Mr. Roberts, and a B.M.O.C. is quite as likely to be poor as anyone else. Qn the whole Mr. Roberias' article is not bad. We reiterate in conclusion that we are in complete agreement with his final statement, that Michigan fashions of education are beginning to show hopeful signs of change. About Books r' Screen Refections AT THE MAJESTIC 444 "LADY KILLER" FRE-LIMAN TRYOUTS: William Jackson, Louis Gold- smith, David Schifier, William Barndt, Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Robert Owen, Ted Wohlgemuth, Jerome Grossman, Avner, Kronenberger, Jim oriskey, Tom Clarke. Scott, Samuiiwl Bckman, Homer Lathrop, Hall, Ross Levin, Willy Tomrlinren, Dean Asselin, Lymani Bittman, Joh;i' Park. Don Hutton, Allen Ulpson, Richard Harden brook, Gordon Cohn. VIX _ _ _-- - --- --- - ne NIGHT ELDITOR: JOHN C. HEALEY Happy Burlhiay Dean, CooIey.. C ONGRATULATIONS and Many Happy Returns to our Grand Old Man! Michigan numbel s among its faculties and alumni many men of outstanding attainments in various fields of human knowledge and activity,4 but it is doubtful that there is concentrated in one individual such a diversity of contributions to the general welfare as in Mortimer E. Cooley. Dean Cooley caine to the University from ,the U. S Navy as the first Professor of Mechanical Engineering 1881. From 1904 to 1928 he served it as Dean, and it can be said without prejudice that its present stapding and reputation are largely due to his whole hearted and untiring efforts. Not only recognized as a leader in his profession, as evidenced by his election as president of va- rious national societies, he also has given liberally of his time and energy to public, civic and na- tional affairs. The Spanish War saw him again in service with the U. S. Navy. In Ann Arbor he has been President of the Common Council. He has served the State of Michigan and otherstates as the pioneer in methods of railroad and other puliiic utilities appraisals, and in Washington as a member of several important national commit- tees. He even found time to run for election as U. S. senator on the Democratic ticket, but in this case misjudged the time. And now, after a well earned retirement from active service, we see him still in harness and busier than ever as State Engineer for the Federal Administration of Public Works under the NRA. So now, without fear of arrest, we raise our glasses and drink (west of Division Street) a toast of Long Life, Happiness and many more birthdays to Mortimer E. Cooley. Editor's Note - This editorial, a perfect ex- pression of Daily sentiment, was contributed by Dean Herbert C. Sadler, who has succeeded Pro- fessor Cooley as Dean of the College of Engineer- ing. "Murmuring Michigan" . . . T HE CAMPUS is talking about Ken- neth Roberts' article, "Murmuring Michigan," appearing in the current Saturday Evening Post. Mr. Roberts is an able commenta- tor; he paints a rather adequate picture of Mich- Dan Quigley .............James Cagney Myrna Gale ................ Mae Clarke Margaret Underwood . .Margaret Lindsay For the brief period of two days (yesterday and today) James Cagney again cavorts on the per- forated sound screen of the Majestic Theatre. This reviewer has always had a fond spot for Mr. Cagney somewhere in his shrivelled heart, and it is with the air of the proud father that he lwarns his readers not to miss the "Lady Killer." Hollywood likes to gorge itself sick with grand- iose, colossal, spectacular screen extravaganzas, but when it sobers up for a moment or two, it usually turns out of its intricate machinery a film in which all superfluous material is left out and all of the elements of goo. movie comedy retained. In the final analysis, films of the type of "Lady Killer" are the only kind which America can produce with a feeling that she alone can do the job adequately. England can make a "Henry the Eighth"to equal a "Queen Christina." Rene Clair in France can release a "Sous Les Tois de Paris" on a par with any Maurice Chev- alier romance. Soviet Russia can produce a "Road to Life" perhaps superior to a "Wild Boys of the Road" of America; and Germany can easily turn out a political satire like "De Hauptmann Von Kopenick" as good as an American "Washington Merry-Go-Round." But when it comes to fast ac- tion pictures full of verve and pep, America has not even a runner-up in the field. In brief, the story concerns itself with Dan Quigley's embroilment with a gang of card sharps, with whom he enters into a partnership after he has discovered the ingenuity of their game. When one of their victims dies because of the rashness of one of the members of the gang, they are forced to break up and flee in all directions of the globe. Dan and Myrna land up in Los Angeles. When Dan is picked up by the police, Myrna deserts and runs off with one of the other members of the gang. The police can not convict Dan and release him. He gets to Hollywood and after a series of hilarious experiences as an extra in the movies, he builds himself up in the eyes of the studio execu- tives by sending volumes of fan mail to himself. Eventually he gets to be a star. James Cagney is not just a wise-cracking bag of wind. He is a neat little actor who does not have to depend on the director for a good perform- ance. His personality escapes from every part of- his anatomy: from his fingers, his head, his eyes, his inflections. With a self assertion that more than makes up for his slight stature, he manages to impress one as being strong and powerful. The bill of fare includes a Fox Magic Carpet short called "Tbe Desert Patrol" which is one of the finest educational shorts exhibited in this theatre in a long while. Its forte is photography, which is equal in beauty to that in the recent "Thunder Over Mexico." -J.C.S. Music ah4Drarn 'THE GONDOLIERS" WILL CONTINUE COMBINING PROCESS By SALLY PLACE and JOHN W. PRITCHARD MUSIC, DANCING, PLASTIC ART, and the theatre have heretofore existed on campus almost independent of each other. In the forth- coming production of "The Gondoliers," however, these departments will be co-ordinated in an at- tempt to produce a whole which will be harmoni- ously combined and in all ways pleasing. Music, of course, will be supervised by the music school; dancing by the physical education department; colorful costumes by the architectural college; and the Thespian angle by Play Production. The Gil- bert and Sullivan comic opera will thus be a sec- and and more advanced step in the process of combining various related departments, the first having been the very successful dance recital last December. "The Gondoliers," which will be produced on the stage of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre to- night through Saturday night, is in every respect an experiment, according to Valentine B. Windt, director. Yet the co-producers are not unmindful of the fact that this experiment is to be presented before a critical audience. They are presenting a modernization of Gilbert and Sullivan - a stylized production which disregards the time-worn Gil- bert and Sullivan tradition. Moreover, the pedagogical value of this enter- prise is kept constantly to the fore. The chief reason for the selection of "The Gondoliers" in preference to another light opera, at this time, is that in this operetta the parts are evenly divided; there is no part that stands out to the sacrifice of another. This gives the students a fair basis of competition. Also a double cast has been prepared which enables more students to appear in promi- nent roles. Strong competition for the parts has arisen, and the choice of one student only indi- cates that he has arrived at a certain advanced stage in assimilating the course,- and does not necessarily intimate that one student is better, in the long run, than another. The chorus is a vital part of the production, adding much gaiety and charm to this delightful work which is good music as well as good theatre. Even in light opera an illusion of reality must be achieved, if it is to compete with other drama- tic forms. "Music must come inevitably from emo- tion," says Mr. Windt. "Opera will survive 'if it meets the requirements of the theatre; if it com- bines, in ther words, its motivation with well aligned body movement and perfection of voice. In the ideal opera, speaking and singing must blend." To give piquancy to "The Gondoliers," no tra- ditions have been considered. Since Gilbert and Sulivan were great satirical artists, the comedy CARDS for EASTER Sunday, April I1st A large and choice selection at 0. D. MORRILL'S Stationery and Typewriter Store 314 South State St. Greeting Cards Occasion I I _ _ for All IS iii"- SPEAKING OF SPRING , = ~" 9 Vv Classified As Get Results We have everything you need for ypur Spring wardrobe We have 11 SUITS DRESSES and Accessories What You'l Want to make your Easter appearances HATS in the new Spring shades: blue, black, brown, white- In 'the latest off-the-face and sailors for yourr Easter costume 11 The RUBLEY Shoppe t ____ ___ ____ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ____ ___ ____ ___ ___ ____ ___ __ DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ADS ARE EFFECTIVE .. a 4 S.. wow i & A THERE ARE UNUSUAL NE% LINES TO THIS HAT- A SWANK MEDIUM BRIM MILAN BRAID WE CALL IT.-- Trimmed with a contrasting patent band, it is being adopted by all smart southerners and being introduced thru- out the country with instantaneous luccess. BLACK-BROWN-NAVY AND ALL BRIGHT SHADES IN 22 AND 23 INCH SIZES; Jacobson's A F: I UI Y FJLLA STRAW, by David ong: Alfred A. Knopf (1934) $2.50 Slater's and Wahr's) A Review: Cornel De- (On Sale at FOUR DAYS MAY 9-10-1 1-12 1934 By ALBERT K. STEVENS HIS "first novel" by a Michigan young man is the kind of thing many readers of The Michi- gan Daily have wanted to write. Many a youth who has emerged from the insularity and narrow- ness of his home community into the liberating atmosphere of college has dallied however briefly with the idea of writing a novel to show up the bigotry, the hypocrisy, and all the other flimsy shams and limitations of the environment above which 1e has risen or with which he has broken. Sinclair Lewis wrote his and called it "Main Street." But most of us don't get our novels written; hence it is good for us who come from one of the many colonies of the Middle West where Old World groups and their American- born children are trying to perpetuate a snobbish insularity to read "Belly Fulla Straw." Distracted by the cheap and noisy America whose mass-production benefits they eagerly ap- propriate, such groups have lost contact with the real spirit of the Old Country; yet they com- monly feel superior to "mere Yankees," and when this feeling of superiority is heightened (as it usually is) by the semi-fanaticism of a dissenting religion, what results is an insufferable festering of smug and cruel self-complacency. In the case of the Michigan Dutch (who call Grand Rapids their "Jerusalem") it was once the custom for partially-Americanized children to trail new im- migrants down the streets, chanting, "Dutchman, Dutchman, belly fulla straw, Can't say nothing but ja, ja, ja!" David Cornel DeJong, recent graduate of a Grand Rapids college, whose own experiences as an immigrant boy provide the substance for some of his most brilliant passages, traces with fidelity to typical experience and with startling accuracy of detail the course of Harmen Idema and his family, who twenty years ago left the serene and solid Netherlands and settled in Grand Rapids, Michigan. We watch the family as it makes its first painful adjustments to the raw crudities of the transplanted Dutch community, and we ob- serve its gradual degeneration into unthinking Americanisms -its loss of a sense of values. In the end Harmen, who, unlike his wife and chil- dren, is throughout a free spirit seeking the good life, turns away in disgust, his belly filled with straw, and goes back alone to the home near the Six CONCERTS I HILL AUDITORI UM PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT Eqrl V. Moore, Musical pirector Eric DeLamarter, Associate Cond Frederick Stock, Orchestra Conductor Juva Higbee, Young People's Cond LUCREZIA-BORI-..........-... . . . . . . . . . . . . . opro Metropolitan Opera Association ROSA PONSELL . . . ... . ... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Sopro Metropolitan Opera Association JEAN ETTE VRE ELAND .......................Sopra American Concert and Oratorio Singer COEGLADE..............................Contra Chicago Civic and other Operas PA L A LTHOUS .............................. Ter Metropolitan Opera Association ARTl1J' HACKTT.......... ................ Te American Opera and Concert Singer T EDORE WEBB...................... . . Barito American Oratorio Singer CHASE BAROMEO........................... Chicago, LaScaIa, and South American Operas GUI A BUSTAO .... . ........ ................Viol' Young American Virtuoso uctor uctor 'no no 3no Ito nor nor ane ass list +MISCHA L EVITZKI.'.'........ . ... . . . . . ......- Distinguished Russian Player MABEL ROSS RIHEAD................. . . ...... Choral Union Accompanist PALMER CHRISTIAN-......................... University of Michigan Organist Pianist Pianist Organist . ti, The University Chorgl Union . 300 Voices The Stanley Chorus . 40 Vices . Chicago Symphony Orchestra .70 players Ninth Symphony ... .. ... Beetboycg Young People's Festiyal Chorus 400 Voices The Seasons . . ........ y American rmiere (specially translated The Ugly DucklingE P .y. g y ......_ _. .....- . _tag. s I