PAGE FOUR THE * MICHIGAN DAFL Y SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1934 - - THE MICHIGAN DAILY the individuals with which it has to deal. Since, as President Ruthven points out, students can hardly be expected to get knowledge without el- fort, and no two students will show the same ef- fort in a common direction, the result can scarcely be unexceptional and uniform brilliance among all graduates. The university's duty can only be to make knowl- edge available, and its goal to make that knowledge as complete and easy of access as possible. To the University the student must come in search of that which he desires. And the degree must be interpreted not as a money-back 20-year guaran- tee, but as an indication that the possessor has de- voted a certain amount of energy to the attaining of his educational goal. Screen Reflections The rating of motion pictures in this column is on the following basis: A, excellent; B, good; C, fair; D, poor, E, very bad. AT THE WHITNEY "BOMBAY MAIL" C-- Edmund Lowe Shirley Grey Yuoished every morning except Monday during th University year and Summer SessiOn by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the WesternConference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. i :e n n The Theatre _ r s ,eMBBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use ftr republication of al news dispathoes 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 Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscrition durin; summerrby carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50..During regular school year by. carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. offices: Student Publicatins Building, Maynard Street Ann A''bor, Michigan. hoe: 2-121. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 4G East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylson Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.............WILLIAM G. FERRIS CITY EDITOR... ...... ...............JOHN HEALEY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR...........RALPH. COULTER SPORTS EDITOR.......... ...... ARTHUR CARSTENS WOMEN'S EDITOR....... ............ELEANORBLUM NIGHT EDITORS: Paul J. Elliott, John J. Flaherty, Thomas A. Groehn, Thomas H. Keene, David G. MacDonald, John M. O'Connell, Robert S. Ruwitch, Arthur M. Taub. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Joel Newman, Kenneth Parker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy Gies, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Murphy. REPORTERS: Donald K. Anderson, John H. Batdorff, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger Robert E. Deisley, Allan Dewey, John A. ole, Sheldon M. Ellis, Sidney Finger, William H. Fleming, Robert J. Freehling, Sherwin Gaines. Ralph W. Hurd, Walter R. Krueger, John N. Merchant, Fred W, Neal. Kenneth Norman,,Melvin C. Oathout, John P. Otte, Lloyd S. Reich. Marshall Shulman, Bernard Weissman, Joseph Yager, C. Bradford Carpenter, Jacob C. Seidel, Bernard Levick. Dorothy Briscoe, Maryana Chockly, Florence Davies, Helen Diefendorf,' Marian Donaldson, Saxon Finch, laine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith, Harriet Hath- away, Marion Hoiden Beulah Kanter, Lois King, Selma Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison. 'Mary Annabel Neal, Ann Neracher, Elsie Pierce, CharlotteMRuegerDor- othy Shappell, Carolyn Sherman, Molly Solomon, Dor- othy Vale, Betty Vinton, Laura Winograd, Jewel Wuerfel. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 4BUSINESS MANAGER............ W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER..........BERNARD E. SCHNACK 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 Rothbard, George Atherton. Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bureley, 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 Simond.l FRESHMAN TRYOUTS: William Jackson, Louis Gold- smith, David Schiffer, William Barnt, Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Roert Owen, Ted Wohgemuth, Jerome Grossman,tAvnr, 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 M. O'CONNELL Senior Sing Revives An Old Tradition.. .. HE SENIOR SING will take place Tuesday evening. As a revival of an honored tradition of bringing the students on the' campus together for an occasion other than a foot- ball game it has a significance that is basic in the philosophy of education and in the purposes of the University. Because of the interest of a few students and members of the faculty the Sing will come into being again after a lapse of two years. The interest of the few, however, will not put over the Senior Sing. What is required is the interest of the campus as a group - an interest that will man- ifest itself only by the presence of the student body the night after tomorrow in front of the Library. Group participation is an event on the Michigan campus. It happens so seldom that it should be welcomed with open arms. The only other occasion in which students participate as a group is an athletic event - and then they join in only as spectators. The University, a State institution, was founded on the ideal of democracy; it offers equal oppor- tunity for an education of all who apply. How may this ideal be better expressed than on an occasion when the entire campus body can take part in a group fete to the outgoing senior class? Turn out for the Senior Sing Tuesday evening in front of the Library. Higher Education And The Individual ... PRESIDENT Alexander G. Ruthven, in a recent talk before the Insti- tute of Adult Education, declared against the wide- spread popular nation that one can catch culture by contact or by some other method realize intel- lectual development without applying one's self to the testing of knowledge as it is acquired. Generally recognized as this fallacy now is among educators and other thinking people, it is needful of even more frequent reiteration before the public which is sending its sons and daughters to college and which must deal with college men and women after they have graduated. AT THE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN "AND SO TO BED" - A Review By JOHN W. PRITCHARD CONVENTIONAL COMEDY of situations trans- posed to the year 1666 is seen in "And So To Bed," James Fagin's comedy of the doings of that amateur musician (flageolet and fiddle), Samuel Pepys. The script itself is very funny during th last two acts, although there is nothing really different about it; yet the comedy is made up by the excellent work of the two principals, Rollo Peters and Eugenie Leontovich, as Samuel and his wife. They played last night at a high pitch and tempo,' making amusing certain portions of the play which had no right to be so, and intensifying the laughter in other parts to which the writer had really done justice. Prospective attendants are warned that this play is not written as a comedy of manners, although its locale, subject matter, and time would indicate that it is. It is situation comedy, with some very good lines and a number of excellent two-dimen- sional characters. It glitters as did the real Res- toration comedies, but its technique differs - there is not the involvement that has to be unravelled, for one thing, Mr. Fagin has, to a certain extent, inserted the ingredients of comedy of manners, and some of the characters - Pelham Humphreys (Robert Henderson), the Frenchified fop, for in- stance - give the idea that the playwright has at- tempted in a superficial way to work in the ele- ments that have made Restoration comedy fa- mous. In general, however, "And So To Bed" has made a careful selectaion and complication of some of the most approved methods of tickling a twen- tieth century audience's ribs, and transferred these methods to the dress and language of the century under his consideration. The high spot of the comedy is Act II, when most of the data which have been disclosed with seem- ing irrelevance in the earlier part of the play are brought together to compromise simultaneously Pepys, Mistress Pepys, Mistress Knight (Katherine Wick Kelly), and Charles II (Donald Randolph). The low point is the whole of Act I, which displays some of the most odoriferous dramatic technique on the part of the writer that I have ever seen inserted in a play written for general consumption. As I have pointed out, the work of the principal pulls this act up to the entertainment level, and thereafter the play can proceed on its own merits. Pepys is presented, at the outset, as a man- about-town who is married to an attractive, jealous, and shrewish woman. He saves (by proxy) the life of Mistress Knight, a singer, and loses no time in appointing a rendezvous with her. Mistress Knight has had her moments with the king. Mis- tress Ppys suspects her husband's plans for the evening( which are, ostensibly, togo to the navy office and work), and follows him. Thereafter peo- ple concur most inauspiciously in their arrivals at the same place. Mr. Peters is his old self - wholly at home in the role, deft, urbane, allowing his language to flow with just an agreeable suspicion of a squeak and stutter. It is a role of a type which is second-nature to him to play. The real acting is done by Mme. Leontovich, who shrills her lines, tosses her skirts, and cavorts about the room in anger that is beau- tiful to watch; yet here one feels that the part does not reach her talents, and that she wastes great- ness (I am told she is great, although I have never seen her before) on frothy .comedy of this ilk. Mr. Henderson lisps his mincing, ridiculous lines to good effect, and Miss Kelly glows efful- gently as the witty, glamorous Mistress Knight. Mr. Randolph admirably depicts regal rakishness as King Charles. "And So To Bed" is exceedingly light and un- pretentious entertainment. Collegiate Observer "Who is the murderer of His Excellency and the, Maharaja?" Here in a sentence is the theme of "Bombay Mail," a picture which is built on niuch' the same lines as was "Shanghai Express." How- ever, in this version of an eventful train ride in the mysterious East, the excitement is provided not by the wiles of a Marlene Dietrich, but by the solu- tion of a series of murders on the tain during the course of the journey. Edmund Lowe, as the inspec- tor, is very much in charge of the proceedings, and his job is to find as many suspects as possible in order to baffle the audience. This is accomplished with a fair degree of success, but the process lacks the power to arouse enough interest to be suffi- ciently entertaining. The story is typical of the or- dinary murder mystery, and the attempts to elevate it above this level are quite insufficient.- For ex- ample, the dialogue employed is so artificial that the characters have no realness. The settings in which they are placed are equally unnatural and decidedly unlike a train interior, even if most of the action does take place in a sumptious private car. However, some of the photography is praise- worthy, and some good effects have been achieved by such elements as the continual, unceasing sounds of the train, the rapid shifting of scenes, and the lack of a super saturating amount of sex. "Bombay Mail" could be a lot worse, but also could be a great deal better than it is. -C.B.C. . Hot Weather That's the weatherman's prediction for you to start thinkig abot sum- mer clothes. Don't swelter in that hot winter suit-be cool-enjoy the weather. Let Ann Arbor merchants show you the smart suits of linens- and gabardines that will be so much in style this summer. Watch for their advertisements on the sport page of The DAILY in the near future. There's More "Tod- Come AT THE MAJESTIC "WE'RE NOT DRESSING" K _N } , C Stephen ..................Bing Crosby Doris ...................Carole Lombard Hubert .....................Leon Errol Directed by ............ Norman Taurog Norman Taurog, famous for his work on the two pictures, "Skippy" and "Sooky," has been turned loose on Crosby. But the effect is not so happy. Bing Crosby, Carole Lombard, Leon Errol, George Burns, Gracie Allen, and Ethel Merman have all been brought together. The parts they contribute are good, but that still doesn't make a film. There is a story which one is not supposed to take too ser- iously, and there is some humor which often makes one laugh. But all these still do not make a film. "We're Not Dressing," then is not a film but a lengthy sound and visual record of the singing of Bing Crosby. If it were to make this claim, it would be successful in its attempt, but since it claims to be a movie, one must measure it -by movie standards. The idea of the story is patterned after that of "The Admiral Creighton." -"A shipwrecked party consisting of two society girls, two gigolo fortune chasers, one amiable uncle, and one sailor, try to make life pleasant on a Southern Pacific island until they are rescued. Since the sailor is the only one who knows how to work, and since one must work in order to eat, it is he who takes command. On the same island they find a naturalist and his wife (Burns and Allen). They quarrel, make love, and sing until they are picked up, there being an overabundance of the last. Bing Crosby sings well, is a pleasing comedian, and in general carries himself faultlessly through the film. Miss Lombard was obviously miscast as his leading lady. The part required someone who could sing and act as a foil for Crosby. Miss Lom- bard does none of these and further adds to the film's detriment by being a poor actress. Burns and Allen are crazy. But they get paid for it and the public always laughs at them, so I guess they're O.K. with me too. Leon Errol and Ethel Merman would have greatly aided the film if they had been given more footage. There are many, many songs in the film that have already become hits, especially "Love Thy Neighbor." They are all tuneful and entertaining but their overdose begins to become annoying toward the end. On the whole "We're Not Dressing" is an entertaining hour of singing a la Crosby. As a moving picture it is fair. -J. C. S. .4 By BUD BERNARD, At Syracuse University a professor fell asleep recently at the beginning of a short class assign- ment. The students thoughtfully refrained from awakening him until the end of the hour. * * * * Here are the qualifications to become a high and mighty senior in the estimation of the Los Angeles Junior College Daily. Imagine these embryonic col- legians calling a college a "super high school !" 1. Use the word "proletariat" in a sentence at least three times a day. 2. Remain cynically disinterested in the face of all enthusiasm. 3. When-'disappointed merely remark, "Oh, what the hell." 4. Call all women of all ages by their first names and refer to them with a suggestive smile. 5. Pretend to see economic or sexual reasons for everything including wars, movies, colleges, churches, and football games. 6. Have on hand a stock of stories of a more or less personal nature concerning the drunken antics of friends and especially of the more popular people age-old questions of astigmatism, color blindness, and other forms of visual aberration. * * - * Here is a thought from a student at the Uni- versity of Maryland: Modern experts lately find That love is just a state of mind. Lover's ways and coquetry Partake of physiology., But do those with this learned mania Osculate with just their crania? * * * * A dean at the University of Minnesota re- cently told the story about the co-ed who was questioned as to what she would do if she and her boy friend were snowed under while in an automobile out in the prairies. "That's simple," the co-ed replied. "Why?" "Well, you see, within an hour we'd be able to swim out." When a clerk in a drug store at the Uni- versity of Illinois asked what sort of toothbrush a customer wanted, the Greek letter pledge replied, "a large one - there are 80 men in my fraternity." - ~ * * * There is a ruthless, cruel man on the faculty of Syracuse University. Even while recovering from an operation for appendicitis, this gentleman gave 1.934 Ensiani Distribution conitm- nes at the Student Pub1ieations Buildin at 420 Maynard Street. All Ia ets must 1e made be- fore opies fimay be received. A few copies are still availab le at f ar AII I