THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'HE CHIGAN DAILY nondescript delegates should be invited. Such a monthly meeting would be pleasant and broaden- ing, and would in all probability both encourage the formulation of other worthwhile projects and engender the spirit that would be necessary to make them successful. Screen Reflections I - V1.4,,~. Puwished 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. !1 $5tzia ,d 4 .rF '- 1933 (uio u covEauc 1:34 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is mncusively entitled to the use frr republicationofat rll news dispathos credited to it or not otherwise credited inthil 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 A'.listant Postmaster-General. Sbscrltion during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $150. Duing regulat school year by carrier, $3.75; by -. mal, .$4M.". Offices: Student Pub icatioys Building, Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-2A,. Representatives: College Publications Representatives Inc., 4C East Thirty-Fourth Street, New Yrk City; 8 Boyson Street, Boston ; h12 Nrth Michigan Avenue, Chicago.' EDiTRIAL STAFF .Telephone 425" MANAGING EDITOR .......THOMAS K. CONNELLAlat CITY VDITOR...........BKACKLEY SAW EDITORIALDIRE0:OR.... .....C. HART SCHAAfi SPORTS 'EDITOR.................ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR.....................CAROL J. HANAN ZIGHT EDITORS: A. Eis Bal, Ralph G. Coulter, William . Ferris, John C, Healey, George Van Vleck, E. Jerome l'ttit.- SPORTS ASSISTANTS. Charles A. Baird, Arthur W. Car stens, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSSTANTS: 4arjorie Beck, Eleanor Blun 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 B. Levick, David 0. MacDonald, Joel P. Newman, John M. O'Connell, Kenneth Parker, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch Arthur S. Settle, Jacob C. Seidel, Marshall D. Silverman, Arthur M. Taub Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, Marjorie Mor rison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider BUSINESS STAFF ' elephone 2-l 14. BUSINESS MANAGER ............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER ........:...BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER..................... .............................. CATHARINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Noel Tur- ner; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circula- tion and Contracts, Jack Efroymson. ASSISTANTS: Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Ros- enthal, Joe Rothbardc, 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 Simondi. FRESHMAN TRYOUTS: William Jackson, Louis Gold- smith, David Schiffer, William Barndt; Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Robert Owen, Ted Wohlgemuth, Jerome Grossman, Avncr, Kronenberger, Jim Horiskey, Tom Clarke, Scott, Samuel Beckman, Homer Lathrop, Hall, Ross Levin, Willy Tmlinsen, Dean Aseelin, Lyman Bittman, John Park, Don Hutton, Allen Ulpson, Richard Hardenbrook, Gordon Cohn. NIGHT EDITOR: A. ELLIS BALL A New In terfraterni ty 'Council HE STORMY SESSION of the In- terfraternity Council Tuesday night brought to the surface an opinion which has been forming in the minds of a number of those who have worked with it through this and past years. This opinion is that, as it now operates, the Inter- fraternity Council is an inept, uninteresting, and impotent organization. No one who has attended many meetings of the Council can question the validity of this criticism. To wait regularly for periods of an hour or more until a quorum can by dint of a great many tele- phone pleas be assembled, to listen to intermediate discussion of projects which never seem to fructify, is to reach the point where other than an unfa- vorably critical conclusion is impossible. It would be a marvel that so many as seventeen votes were cast at the meeting Tuesday for continuation of the council, were it not for the conviction that most of the seventeen voted either as inexperienced delegates of a congenitally conservative bent, as persons hopeful of the hollow spoils of office, or as men who out of pride felt they had to defend their handiwork. Any consideration of the just criticism which must be levelled at the Council as it has existed points to the recommendation that the Council be abolished; we agree with the decision of the ma- jority in Tuesday's unofficial vote, which favored radical change in the Council's set-up, i.e., the substitution for it of a new body. We believe that two factors are at the base of the Council's unworthiness. It must be emphasized in passing that neither of these concerns the offi- cerial personnel that has functioned during the current year. The two factors which we condemn are first, the official connection of the University with the Council, specifically through the Coun- cil's Judiciary Committee; and second, the activ- ities which the Council has deemed its proper goals. The first fault, the one which was most heavily scored night before last, is luckily very easy to overcome. The evil of University interference can be cured, once and for all, by the simple expedient of eliminating it. In whatever body takes the place of the present council, that is, let there be no con- nection, official or unofficial, direct or indirect, with the faculty or administration of the University. We are not at liberty to divulge names, but we wish to tender the information that several persons high in the administration believe that such a di- vorce would be logical and healthy. The second criticism is susceptible of more AT THE WHITNEY Double Feature C "KING FOR A NIGHT" Chester Morris Helen Twelvetrees "King for a Night" is a picture with a punch in it, being the story of a small town boy who fights his way to the light heavyweight champion- ship of the world. Executed with quite a good amount of novelty and restraint, it has some gen- uinely good moments for which it should be com- mended. However, there are several weak spots which reek of sentimentality and shades or trite- ness that prevent its being as good as it could have been. Chester Morris gives an admirable per- formance in portraying an egotistical but sin- cerely purposeful young man' whose success is his tragedy. He is ably assisted by the blond Helen Twelvetrees, who this time is not the sweetheart but the little sister whose adoration of him gets him into all sorts of trouble. Alice White (remodeled nose and all) is cast as her usual self, and she fits in quite well with the general trends of the picture. "King for a Night" is slightly above being mediocre, but is not far enough to be con- sidered valuable entertainment. E "CROSS STREETS" John Mack Brown Claire Windsor Anita Loos If you miss the old days of the movies in which college sentimentality and loose women were para- mount in importance in the lives of old grads, don't miss this rank, impossible, rottenly-executed story of a drunken doctor who gives his all for the happiness of the woman he once loved. In it you will see the complete degradation of John Mack Brown as an actor, the resurrection of Claire Windsor as a leading lady of no worth whatever, and the most awful direction you ever witnessed in a moving picture. E represents extinct in this case. -C.B.C. Musical 'Events - TONIGHT'S FEATURES Mischa Levitski, pianist "The Seasons" Chicago Symphony Orchestra Frederick Stock and Earl V. Moore, Conductors. FIRST CONCERT In Review THE FESTIVAL went off with fireworks last night, with Rosa Ponselle, colorful, brilliant, dramatic as she is, the chief display of the eve- ning. The arrangement of Stock's came as a surprise, accustomed as we are to hearing Bach treated in a conservative style, with no harp, no gong, or glock- enspiel, celeste or triangle. Whatever its relation-; ship to the original, the Bach last night had res- onance, color interest, and clearly marked voices, especially in the Fugue. "La Mer" of Debussy, for those who know the sea in its calm or its sparkling moods, felt the movement of the water, then light and sound that play within it. This sea was not ter-, rorizing even though full of strength and power. The Ravel "Rapsodie Espagnole," full of insinuat- ing rhythms, under Stock's organizing left hand, was another descriptive piece, gay and alluring. Of Ponselle it can be said that "charm strikes the sight but merit wins the soul." Bringing opera to the concert stage in her arias, using her voice with every nuance, securing smoothness, she com- bines, as has been said many times and much bet- ter, personal captivation with technical excellence. Her last encore could have been omitted in order to allow the concert to end on a high psychological point. The concert proved the aavantage of personal appearance and contact with an audience, over the radio, where, until television is perfected, the show of such a performance is lost. -Sally Place. Campus Opinion - = - - - - ----- ~~n 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 commutnicants will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 500 Words if possible. COMMITTEE FOR THE THIRTY-EIGHT DESCRIBE MAY DAY DEMONSTRATION To the Editor: At a meeting held Monday night twenty-three students in person and ten more by proxy, elected us, a committee of eight, to present to the campus the true story of the May Day trip to Detroit. We were instructed to protest against our maltreat- ment by the Detroit police, the misrepresentation by the Detroit press, to voice our special disap- proval of the vicious editorial in the Daily written with the view to influence opinion against us before the facts were known, and to demand an, investigation of the police rather than of the students. It has been the custom during the last few years for a group of students to participate in the May Day demonstrations. This year a group of thirty-eight students composed largely of radicals and liberals who wished to show their solidarity with the working class and to protest the infringe- ment of civil rights, several students of sociology, and a few others interested in observing the dem- The Theatre CORRECTED DRAMATIC SEASON PROGRAM FOLLOWING IS THE FINAL revised program of the Dramatic Season to be presented during five weeks beginning next Monday at the Lydia Mendelssohn: First Week: Monday, May 14: - The American premiere pro- duction of "The Brontes" with Violet Kemble- Cooper, Elizabeth Risdon. Tuesday, May 15-"The Brontes." Wednesday Mat. and Night, May 16 -"The Brontes." Thursday, May 17 - "The Brontes." Friday Matinee and Night, May 18 - "The Brontes." Saturday Matinee and Night, May 19-- "And So To Bed," with Madame Eugenie Leontovich, Rollo Peters and Roberta Beatty. Second Week: Special Monday Matinee, May 21- Dance Recital, Charles Weidman, Doris Humphreys. Monday Night, May 21- "And So To Bed." Special Tuesday Matinee, May 22 - Dance Recital, Charles Weidman, Doris Humphreys. Tuesday Night, May 22 - "And So To Bed." Wednesday Matinee and Night, May 23 - "And So To Bed." Special Thursday Matinee, May 23-Dance Re- cital, Charles Weidman, Doris Humphreys Thursday Night, May 24 -"And So To Bed." Friday Matinee and Night, May 25- "Meet My Sister," with Walter Slezak, Olive Olsen and Dor- othy Vernon. SaturdayMatinee and Night, May 26-- "Meet My Sister." Third Week: Monday, May 28- "Meet My Sister." Tuesday, May 29 - "Meet My Sister," Wednesday Matinee May 30 -"Meet My Sister." Wednesday Night, May 30- "The Shining Hour" with Rollo Peters, Violet Kemble-Cooper and Jessie Busley. Thursday Night, May 31- "The Shining Hour." Friday Matinee and Night, June 1- "The Shin- ing Hour." Saturday, Matinee and Night, June 2 - "The Shin- ing Hour." Fourth Week: Monday, June 4--"The Shining Hour." Tuesday, June 5 - "Macbeth" with Ian Keith and Florence Reed. Wednesday Matinee and Night, June 6 -"Mac- beth." Thursday, June 7- "Macbeth." Friday Matinee and Night, June 8 - "Macbeth." Saturday Matinee and Night, June 9 -"Macbeth." Fifth Week: Monday, June 11 -"She Loves Me Not" with Gloria Blondell. Tuesday, June 12 - "She Loves Me Not." Wednesday Matinee and Night, June 13 -"She Loves Me Not." Special Thursday Matinee, June 14 - "She Loves Me Not." Thursday Night, June 14 - "She Loves Me Not." Friday Matinee and Night, June 15 - "She Loves Me Not," Saturday Matinee and Night, June 16 - "She Loves Me Not." Monday, June 18- "She Loves Me Not" (Gala Closing). Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD A chemistry instructor at the University of Maryland asked a student for the formula of water. The student answered HIJKLMNO. When asked what the big idea was he ex- claimed, "That's I to O isn't it?" Graduates at the University of Kentucky are listed in a pamphlet called "Bargains in Brains," in which the picture of each graduate, his age, height, chief interest, and experiences are listed. The plan was used last year with the result that all but two graduates were placed. Here's a pet tongue twister from a Speech class at the University of California. If a student gets through this one without biting his tongue he can qualify to take the course: Theophiles Thistle, a successful thistle sifter, in sifting a sieveful of un- sifted thistles, thrust three thousand thistle& through the thick of his tongue; now, if Theo- philes Thistle, a successful thistle sifter, in sifting a sieveful of unsifted thistles thrust three thousand thrcugh the thick of his thumb, see that thou in sifting a sieveful of unsifted thistles thrust not three thousand thistles through the thick of thy thumb. *I * * * Next year at Missouri University special flunk- proof course are offered for "dumb" students and others not interested in a college degree. Students of low college ability often make good if allowed to enter special work in which they are interested but almost never get through school if they are forced to take required subjects. of police prevented the Detroit people from assem- bling in the park. Seeing that there was no meet- ing we drove through part of the park and the neighboring streets cheering and singing workers' and school songs. A squad of motorcycle police surrounded the truck and ordered us to follow them out of the city. Instead of leading us out of the city the police forced us down a side-street border- ing the river where they ordered us out of the truck. Although we obeyed orders explicitly and gave no provocation for attack, two policemen boarded the truck, addressed us with obscene lan- guage, struck several of us with blackjacks and MAY FESTIVAL MAY 10, 111 12 Artists i LUCREZIA BORI .....Soprano ROSA PONSELLE .... Soprano JEANNETTE VREELAND... ...................Soprano COE GLADE ........ Contralto PAUL ALTHOUSE ...... Tenor ARTHUR HACKETT ..Tenor THEODORE WEBB.. Baritone CHASE BAROMEO...... Bass GUILA BUSTABO....Violinist MISCHA LEVITZKI... Pianist MABEL ROSS RHEAD ..... ...............Accompanist PALMER CHRISTIAN Organist Organizations THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION .................30 Voices THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA......... ...70 Players YOUNG PEOPLE'S FESTIVAL CHORUS . .... . . .......400 Voices THE STANLEY CHORUS .......................... ..Women Choral IWorks SONG OF PEACE (Ein Friedenslied)..............Robert Heger NINTH SYMPHONY.................... . .........Beethoven THE SEASONS.............................. . ......Haydn THE UGLY DUCKLING ......................... . .....English BY THE RUINS OF BABYLON .....................Loeffler Conductors EARL V. MOORE...................... . .....Musical Director FREDERICK STOCK ......................Orchestra Conductor ERIC DeLAMARTER ....................... Associate Conductor JUVA HIGBEE ,............ ..........Young People's Conductor PROGRAMS 11. THURSDAY EVENING, 8:15 TEANNETTE VREELAND, Soprano MISCHA LEVITSKI, Pianist PAUL ALTHOUSE, Tenor PALMER CHRISTIAN, Organist DHASE BAROMEO, Bass UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA EARL V. MOORE and FREDERICK STOCK, Conductors "The Seasons" ..................................................Haydn An Oratorio for Soprano, Tenor, and Bass Soli, Mixed Chorus, Orchestra, and Organ MISS VREELAND, Messrs. ALTHOUSE and BAROMEO and the UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION Concerto in G minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 22 ....Saint-Saens Andante sostenuto Allegro scherzando Presto 111. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30 GUILA BUSTABO, Violinist ERIC DE LAMARTER and YOUNG PEOPLE'S CHORUS JUVA IIIGBEE, Conductors STANLEY CHORUS Allegro from Concerta No. 2 in F maor for Trumpet ana Strings ("Brandenberg")...............................Bach Songs: On Wings of Song..............................Mendelssohn Hedge Roses ...........................................Schubert Blue Danube Waltz...................................J. Strauss YOUNG PEOPLE'S CHORUS Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 28.................... ......................... Saint-Saenis GUILA BUSTABO Cantata, "The Ugly Duckling" ...... .....................Engsh YOUNG PEOPLE'S CHORUS First Symphony ........................Milhaud By the Waters of Babylon ...............................Loeffler THE STANLEY CHORUS Andante and Rondo-Allegro from "Symphony Espagnol . for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 21...........................Lan MISS BUSTABO IV. FRIDAY EVENING, 8:15 LUCREZIA BOR, Soprano CHICAGO SYPMPHONY ORCHESTRA FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor Fantasie, "A Night on a Bare Mountain" ..............Moussorgsky Aria, "Vol che sapete........ ....... ...............+Mozart LUCREZIA BORI Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98 ..........................Brahms Recitative and Aria of Lia ("L'Enfant Prodigue")............Debussy MISS BORI "Sailor's Dance" ("Pavot Rouge").........................Gliere Aria, "Depuis le Jour" ("Louise")...................... Charpentier MISS BORI V. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30 JEANNETTE VREELAND, Soprano THEODORE WEBB, Bass COE GLADE, Contralto UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION ARTHUR HACKETT, Tenor CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor Overture to "Carlolanus," Op. 6 ......................Beethoven Symphony No. 9, in D minor, Op. 125.................Beethoven MISS VREELAND, MISS GLADE, MR: HACKETT. AND MR. WEBB UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION Tone Poemr"Ein Heldenleben," Op. 40.....................Strauss The Hero The Hero's Adversaries The Hero's Companion The Hero's Battlefield The Hero's Mission of Peace - The Hero'.4 Escape from the World - Conclusion VI. SATURDAY EVENING, 8:15 JEANNETTE VREELAND, Soprano CHASE BAROMEO, Bass COE GLADE, Contralto PALMER CHRISTIAN, Organist PAUL ALTHOUSE, Tenor UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, EARL V. MOORE, Conductor If I A Rna o P~p f inP ipl Qi d I .............. ee~r PRINTING PRICES THAT WILL PLEASE YOUI THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown -- 206 North Main St. Dial 2-1013 Next to Downtown Postofice Typewriting Paper at Reduced Prices WEEKWEND SPECIAL Apex Special Lawn Mower, 10" Wheel, 4 blades, $675 Ball Bearing, 16" cut. * Eureka 5-blade, 10" Wheel, 16" cut, Ball Bearing $745 Lawn Mower. .. .... * Hand Made Splint 5c Laundry Basketsi. . ... <" All Rubber Hose $298 (50 ft. Coil) ........ " SCHLENKER HARDWARE CO. Phone 8575 213-215 W. Liberty ioolng Furnaces Sheet Metal CLAS SIFIED' DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Phone 2-1214. Place advertisements with Clasdifled Advertising Department. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertions. Box Numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in Advance-le per reading line (on bais of five average words to line) for one or two Insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more inerions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone Rate-15c per reading line for one or two Insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. By Contract, per line-2 lines daily, one month..................... 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months......3 2 lines daily, college year .....7 4 lines E. 0. D., college year ....7c 100 lines used as desired ......9c 300 lines used as desired.......Be 1.000 lines used as desired ......7c 2,000 lines used as desired . c.B The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per Inch of 7 point Ionic type, upper a:d lower case. Add ce per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add Bc per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10 per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. WANTED WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main. 5x NOTICE AUTO LOANS AND REFINANCING Bring your title Associated Motor Services, Inc. 311 W. Huron, Ph. 2-2001 12x TAXICABS ARCADE CAB. Dial 6116. Large com- fortable cabs. Standard rates. 2x TAXI-Phone 9000. Seven-passenger cars. Only standard rates. 1x LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4 FOR RENT COSTUMES and wigs rented, Wuerth Theatre, second floor. 450 LOST AND FOUND LOST: A white poodle puppy. Last seen on corner of State and Huron Streets at noon Wednesday. Phone 4624. Reward. 452 The AdvY"antageous Results of Clssfied h ave b een prove n Cash Ra tes 11c.0 Line The Michigan Daily Maynard Streei Read, The Tl Al TT TT ( 11