P'AGE FouR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, DEC. 10, 1936 UU THE MICHIGAN DAILY RO-M 1936 Member 1937 ssocided Collegiate Press * Distributors of Cole ae D6est Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Enteredat the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK N.Y. CHICAGO BOSTON . SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES - PORTLAND * SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ...............ELSIE A. PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR..........FRED WARNER NEAL ASSOCIATE EDITOR........MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Departmental Boards Publication Department:nElsie A.rPierce, Chairman; James Boozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver- man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, Mary Sage Montague. Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman Fred DeLano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Marca Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER ..................JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JEAN KEINATH Business Assistants: Robert Martin, Ed Macal, Phil Bu- chen, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Newton Ketcham, Robert Lodge, Ralph Shelton, Bill New- nan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layhe, J. D. Haas, Russ Cole. Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L.NAdasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crawford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy. Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers hack Staple. Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM SPALLER Planning Without Doctrine .. . SOON AFTER HE jumped from politics to molasses, Rexford G. Tugwell, in an article in the New Republic, out- lined for us his program for the next four years in national planning. The views which he adopts certaintly are not the communistic prop- aganda Mr. Bingay had led us to believe they would be, and if views such as these would embarrass President Roosevelt to the ex- tent that Tugwell was asked to resign for polit- ical reasons (though this is pure conjecture) then the position of President Roosevelt on the vital issue of the relation of government to business becomes even more of a paradox. The thesis of Tugwell's article is that a pro- gram of economic planning is possible in a democratic society without a doctrinaire system. This is the time, in the "breathing spell," for the program of economic planning to be dis- cussed: "The purchasing power of consumers has to be enlarged until it suffices to take off the market the goods that an expanding industry can supply. Otherwise employment will lag, debts will again increase and the two-unem- ployment and debt-will again bury us in dis- aster." We have even taken certain steps in the di- rection of ironing out the cyclical variations in- herent in free private enterprise: "the control of security and commodity exchanges; the better balance of agricultural and industrial incomes; the steady carrying of income through work- relief and resettlement grants to the lowest in- come groups; the appraisal policies of the Farm Credit Administration and of the Home Owner's Loan Corporation, which may steady speculation In real estate; the encouragement of higher wages and shorter hours. These and some other advances have been made. But the most im- portant of them are dependent on a large fed- eral budget, which may or may not be maine# tained, and on considerable reform of the tax system. "Even if all these were maintained in full effect, which is doubtless too much to expect, there is reason for concern so long as industry, the great force in our economic life, continues its unplanned and directionless course. This is where planning is really needed to prevent fu- ture trouble and it is also the most hopeless from the planners' point of view. Even is the well- known objections of our courts were out of the way, which of course they are not, there remain the obstacles of lack of knowledge and of un- willingness of the administrators concerned to statesmanship of a like sort. Management is seeking nothing, apparently, except the enlarge- ment of profits; and labor nothing but an incres- ing share in them. This is not an asmosphere in which one who is concerned for the nation's welfare can hope for very much. Yet there is the great fact of the election staring all of us in the face. Our leaders have been told that their concern for the common man, and federal intervention to implement it, is approved. The arguments for states' rights and for the sacred- ness of certain other institutions, made certainly with extreme emphasis and with the directness of accusation, have been repudiated. The fact of this mandate and this rejection must have its effect on the minds even of die-hard indus- trialists. Perhaps in time the demand for eco- nomic statesmanship will sink in. Perhaps it will be approached with certain face-saving for- malities and with appropriate indirection, slowly and awkwardly. As to this I am not sufficiently gifted with prophecy to say." With the central aim of achieving economic stability through democratic means no one will quarrel, but there are certain basic assumptions implicit in Mr. Tugwell's argument that deserve further consideration. In the first place, to speak of operating with- out a doctrine requires qualification. While it may be true that labels-communism, socialism, etc.-are loose and subject to various degrees of interpretation; while it is also true that "a system built up without deference to preconcep- tion, and.therefore without hostage to doctrine, may have greater survival value and may even work tolerably well in doing the things that must be done as we go along"; yet to speak of abandoning doctrine is a meaningless expression. From the suggestions embodied in the article, Tugwell's philosophy seems to be a modified so- cialism. The term is not important in itself, but the conception is. To operate by a "plan- less plan" has no meaning; one either intends to preserve free private enterprise in part, in whole, or not at all, and the actions of the gov- ernment must be consistent with that end. Secondly, there is an assumption which Mr. Tugwell makes which is not to be accepted with- out further proof. "If what our business men are interested in is the administration of a huge and smoothly running system of production, their future is a bright one; if they are inter- ested still in gambling, and in keeping society insecure so that there may be uncertainties to provide gambling risks, their future is not so bright. If democracy is to succeed, it must re- duce risks and bring each citizen greater faith in the future. It is on this ground that com- petition with dictatorship will be carried out." This is, everyone will grant, perfectly true. But to hold that vested interests will, acting accord- ing to an enlightened selfishness, give up certain of its privileges and profits is to overlook the action of capital in the last election. Roosevelt, through his attempts to ameliorate the evils of the capitalistic system through moderate adjust- ments, could not succeed in convincing the prime beneficiaries of that system that their ultimate welfare rested upon those adjustments. They constituted the opposition. Is it likely that they will recognize the necessity for these changes under any other conditions--except when forced to do so? Consider the specific measures which Mr. Tugwell might have suggested( but did not) -wage and hour minimum legislation, price fix- ing, settlements of labor disputes, government operation, regulation or control of key indus- tries-can we believe that vested industry will benevolently acquiesce to any of these measures? There are some who insist that we have not felt the full force of reaction. Certain moderate concessions have been won from vested inter- ests by the New Deal, but the same yielding atti- tude will not be met when the demands become more basic, when emergency 'conditions do not prevail. (T FORUM Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. contributors are asked to betbrief, the editorsareserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accet or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. A Program For The Church To the Editor: I was much interested in the editorial in Tues- day's Daily on the relationship of institutional religion to democratic society. I was interested especially that the writer of the editorial stated that "in the Protestant Church there is an oli- garchy the authoritarianism of which becomes increasingly evident with the passing of time." Unfortunately there is much truth in this. There are well-meaning and sincere people belonging to the church who apparently hold fast the no- tion that religion should not be introduced into the business, industrial, and political world, and sad to say, many of these people have developed a false idea of the obligations ministers have to society at large. They often demand that the clergy limit their teaching of religion to private devotions and personal experience, and insist that the preacher refrain from mention- ing that part of the Gospel of Jesus Christ which has to do with man's behavior in social, polit- ical, and industrial affairs. Recently some of these sincere people who hold this point of view made, through the circulation of pamphlets, such demands upon many Protestant ministers; so much so, in fact, that a group of Episcopal clergymen in Michigan felt called upon to state their position on what they felt to be their own obligations and the obligations of the\ Church. I quote part of their statement, not only because it is of interest, in view of your editorial, but also because it aims at a solu- tion of the problem of the relation of organized BENEATH **** *~#~*~IT ALL &, - y Bonth iWillinm? "" DEAR BONTH: I've just noticed that you are writing a column, and that plus the thought that I owe you a letter, prompts me to recall what a swell time you and I and the rest of the gang had our freshman year over on East U. Sometimes I wish I hadn't flunked out that first June. Remember Mrs. - who used to come into your 'suite' and tell us about the evils of drink and then point to her husband and say, "Now there's an example." That was befor e Repeal and in Jimmy Palace's hey day, when every Friday afternoon, five bells spelled the end of chem lab and the begining of the week-end. First it was ice and mix at the drug store, and then back to somebody's room and mix it up with that "Special Jamaica Rum"' or "guaranteed Seagrams." Remember rushing. What an awful ordeal! We used to think it was the most important thing in the world then. I'll never forget the night we sat up and talked Bob into pledging with us. He was always the conservative of the bunch, but probably the smartest too. I heard from Chuck De Baker not so long ago and he apparently is doing very well. I won- der what ever happened to Carroll Sweet, Mutt's roommate. He was the guy who was nuts about toy sail boats and sometimes had spells. Upton has finally gotten out of Michigan I understand. He gave up all his upcle's dough to go back to Cripple Gulch and tend an or- chard. I hear Al Dewey was elected President of the senior class. Good old Al, he could always get away with murder with those rosy cheeks of his. He used to room -with Parky, and teach him about life in a big city as I recollect. And Walt Carrigan, is he still arourd? As I look back over that year at school, I think it was probably the best of my life. What parties we-used to throw, and somehow or other we always got our work done, except me who wouldn't have done it if we were chained in a convent. Somehow or other I don't think I'd like Mich- igan now.. There have been a lot of changes since 1933, I guess..'I hear the fraternity parties are pretty awful, now.. No drinking in the houses, none of those old cocktail parties up on the third floor that were about as harmless as anything you'd ever find, and yet a hell of a lot of fun. Why in the world the University ever banned those is beyond me. There used to be so many people in every room that you couldn't sneeze without disturbing the whole crowd. I've been out for a couple of week-ends this fall - when you were out of town at the games, I guess, and I certainly noticed a difference. Things seem much more serious than they did three years ago. People don't appear to be having as good a time as they used to. They look worried and as if they'd like to break loose from it all. Maybe I'm all wrong, but I'm glad I got in my year at Michigan when I did. Yours as ever, D.R. religion and cannot be defended as Christian. Cities have their slums. The slums tend to produce low moral standards which in turn breed criminals. Should the minister confine his work to that of converting sinners and re- forming criminals and do nothing, or say nothing, about economic conditions which tend to produce the slums? Should religion deal only with crime as an effect and do nothing to do away with the causes of crime? Does the social responsibility of a true Chris- tian end with his contribution to the community fund and the gift of his old clothes to the poor? To talk this way to the clergy is just as rational as it would be to say to the physician, 'It is true that an epidemic is raging, but you must confine yourself to the healing of people suffering from this disease and pay no attention to the unsanitary conditions back of the epi- demic. In case of yellow fever forget the mosquitoes. In case of rabies, do not bother about chaining up the dogs causing the trouble. To bother about such things is poor judgment on your part. You will have more business and bigger income 'if you confine yourself to the healing of the sick and let the cause of it alone.' "We believe that the Gospel of Jesus Christ touches life at every point where there is a hu- man soul in any kind of human need. We be- lieve that His Gospel will cleanse and transfigure every relationship in which human souls are brought in contact with each other whether these relationships be social or economic, relig- ious or political. We believe that the light of the Gospel of the Christ must make pure the heart and mind of the level of the individual; must purify the relationships of class and caste; must stimulate and clarify the conscience of the nation; and, on the plane of international relationships, this same Gospel of the Christ must provide the foundation and the spirit for the future peace of the world. Therefore be it resolved: "That, as clergymen, we maintain it to be both our inalienable right under God, and our bounden duty in the service of His church, to point out the social as well as the individual sins of humanity; and that, as ministers of Jesus the Christ, we are bound by our ordination vows to give our thought, our time, and our energies, no less to the removal of social wrongs than to the causes of individual sins. This we, as Christian ministers, hold to be our duty to do and to teach and that we stand ready to fulfill MUSIC Program Notes, II BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER "SCHERZO IN G MINOR" from the Octet, Opus 20 - Mendels- sohn (1809-1847. The first product of Mendelssohn's musical maturity, his first work which has held its place on its own merits, was the String Octet written in 1825 - a year before the famous Overture to "A Midsummer Night's Dream" - when Felix was still in his seventeenth year. The scherzo movement, unlike most of its kind, is in duple time, and is of the same airy, fanciful nature as that better-known scherzo written years later as a part of the complete Midsummer Night's Dream music. According to Mendelssohn's I sister, Fanny, his motto for the Scherzo to the Octet was the fol- lowing stanza in the Intermezzo of Faust: "Floating cloud and trailing mist Brightening, o'er us hover; Airs stir the brake, the rushes shake - And all their pomp is over." This movement alone was orches- trated by the composer himself when, at the age of twenty, he paid his first trip to England, and was played at a concert of the London Philhar- monic Society as a part of his First Symphony, replacing the Minuet and Trio originally written for that work. Symphony No. 5 in C Minor - Beethoven (1770 - 1827). Several years ago a nation-wide poll was conducted by one of the leading sym- phony societies of the country to discover the favorite musical com- positions of therAmerican public. In the symphonic race the winner - by something resembling a Rooseveltian majority - was Ludwig van Beetho- ven's Symphony No. 5. Less tangi- ble than the mere fact of the Sym- phony's popularity is the reason for it. Perhaps the intriguing mystery attached to the first movement's four-note theme -which Beethoven once referred to, seriously or not, as I 'Fate knocking at the door" -has enhanced the work's attractiveness for some people. It is more likely, however, that the reason for the Symphony's great popularity is to be found in the fact that in it Bee- thoven expresses musical ideas of immense and vital appeal in a direct, concise manner which makes the work clearly understandable by the musically unlearned as well as by musical scholars. The first movement, "Allegro con Brio," with its incessant, impelling repetition of the four-note thematic figure, has long been considered a supreme example of the use of the structural pattern which underlies most of the greater works of musical literature - the "sonata-allegro," in which two themes of contrasting na- ture are successively presented, then torn apart and "developed," and fi- nally summarized and restated in a "recapitulation." In this case the subordinate theme is derived from and usually accompanied by the characteristic figure of the prin- cipal theme. The second, or "slow," movement is an "Andante con Moto" and is an irregular specimen of the other gen- eral type of large musical form- the "rondo," in which repetitions of a principal theme are interspersed with themes of contrasting mood and keys. The lovely, flowing principal melody is first presented by the cellos and violas, then followed by a more martial theme in the wind instruments; the remainder of the movement consists largely of varia- tions upon these two themes. The third movement is a Scherzo, of which the main theme is based upon the same four-note figure as the first movement. Between this movement and the final "Allegro" is a long "bridge," in which this figure is muttered over and over again,I first by the strings and then by the kettle drum; and flially, with a! rapid crescendo, the whole orchestra' bursts into the triumphant strains of the Finale. The climactic effect of this last movement is heightened! by the addition to the orchestra of the orchestra of three trombones - the first appearance of this instru- ment in Beethoven's symphonic scores. Concerto for Pianoforte No. 2 in E Major - Sowerby (1895- -). A na- tive of Grand Rapids, Leo Sowerby r-ceived much of his musical edu- cation in Chicago, from which he went to Italy, in 1921, as holder of the first fellowship of music at the American Academy in Rome. Al- though he studied for a number of years in Europe, Mr. Sowerby's mu- sic shows little trace of European influence; his style is highly original and makes use of many of the har- monic and rhythmic devices of mod- ern American jazz. According tc Mr. John N. Burk's notes in the Program Book of the Boston Sym- phony, "The work is one movement, with a semblance of three part form .s.The concerto opens with the first theme, which is in two parts - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN PublucationI n the Builetin is constructive notice to an members of aw University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant wo tlf Preul4do until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. (Continued from Page 2)_ Exhibitions Paintings by Edgar Yaeger and "All-American" prints under the' auspices of the Ann Arbor Art As- sociation, open to the public after- noons, 2-5 p.m. through Dec. 15 in, the small galleries of Alumni Mem- orial Hall. Photographs of Persian-Islamic Architecture exhibited by the Re-' search Seminary in Islamic Art, In-' stitute of Fine Arts. Open to ,the public daily from 9 to 5 p.m.; Sun- days 2 to 5 until Dec. 15. Alumni Memorial Hall West Gallery. Events Of Today University Broadcasting: 2 p.m. An Art Pilgrimage to Famous Mu- seums, No. 9. Miss Adelaide Adams and Miss Marie Abbot: German Journal Club will meet on today at 4:15 p.m. in Room 302 Michigan Union. Dr. Eat- on will speak on the subject' "Holberg and Germany." All interested are invited to attend. English Journal Club 'will meet this afternoon at 4 p.m. in the League. The program, open to the public at 4:15 p.m., will be a colloquium on the subject, "Recent Renaissance Scholarship." Mr. Jack Conklin will review Hardin Craig'sI "TheEnchanted Glass, or The Eliza- bethan Mind in Literature." Mr. A. K. Stevens will review Willard Farn- ham's "The Medieval Heritage of Elizabethan Tragedy." Mr. Wallace Bacon will review Caroline Spurgeon's "Shakespeare's Imagery." General discussion will follow. Engineering Council: a meeting tonight at Computing Room. There will be 7:15 in the Michigan-Purdue Debate: The Un- ivserity of Michigan and Purdue University will participate in a de- bate tonight in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre at 8 p.m. The ques- tion for discussion is: Resolved, that all electric utilities should be gov- ernmentally owned and operated. Michigan will uphold the affirmative and Purdue will uphold the negative. The public is cordially invited to at- tend. There is no admission charge. Zeta Phi Eta: Due to unavoidable circumstances the meeting has been cancelled until next week. Watch for DOB notice. Fencing: The Women's fencing club will meet today at 4:15 p.m. in the basement room of Barbour Gym. Please try to be there promptly. Polish Engineering Society: All Polish Engineering students are in- vited to attend the first meeting of the Junior group of the Polish En- gineering Society to be held at the Michigan, Union today at 7:30 p.m. Room 319-21. 4 1 T H SCREENV AT THE MAJESTIC MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM There was general consternation when Warner Brothers induced Max Reinhardt to Hollywood to produce Midsummer Night's Dream. Could Shakespeare be adapted to motion pictures, and more -than that, could Shakespearian pictures be sold to the general public? While there is doubt among some scholars as to whether the Warner's production is faithful Shakespeare, there is no doubt that it is a successful, delightfully enter- taining picture. Max Reinhardt's creative imagina- tion was given free reign with Warn- er Brothers' facilities. The company's star performers were put into service, along with the ballet corps. And Reinhardt visualized scenes of wood- ,land fantasy, executed by expert cameramen, that would probably make even Shakespeare applaud. The company put out its very best to in- troduce Mr. William Shakespeare to its audiences. Dick Powell is Lysander-fortu- nately, there is not too much of him 'in this picture. Olivia de Haviland makes a pretty, spirited Hermia, but if you can imagine a more beautiful Queen of the Fairies than Anita Louise, I don't know where you will find her. Mickey Rooney is a splen- did impish Puck. And the group of would-be performers with James Cagney, Joe E. Brown, Hugh Herbert, and Frank McHugh, present some of the most hilarious scenes I have seen in pictures. Cagney is Bottom, and has an excellent Jekel-Hyde scene while his head is being transformed into that of an ass. But Joe E. Brown takes honors in side splitting comedy with his performance before the Duke of Athens. The accompanying Mendelssohn Juniors, School of Music: Don't forget the meeting at the School of Music Auditgrium Thursday, Dec. 10, at 5 p.m.Irlportant. State Street Freshmen: General caucus of all State Street Freshmen at the Michigan League tonight at 7:15 p.m. Come and meet your can- didates. "The Good Old Summertime": Be- cause of the Boston Symphony Con- cert this evening, the performances of this new comedy by Play Produc- tion will be given this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. Performances also Friday and Saturday evening att8:30 p.m. Box offices open daily at 10 a.m. Phone 6300. Yeomen of the Guard: All women who wish to be in the chorus must come to a final tryout at the Labora- tory Theatre this afternoon at 5 p.m. Rehearsals of Act I for the entire cast Sunday at 2 p.m., Tuesday at 8 and Wednesday at 7:30. Everyone must be present. Hillel Foundation: Dr. S. Goudsmit will speak at the regular Thursday evening Fireside Discussion. His subject will be "The Jew in Science" (Continued on Page 8) THEATRE By PROF. KENNETH ROWE A first-night audience sat in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre waiting for the curtain to rise on an unknown quan- tity, a premiere of Martin Flavin's "The Good Old Summertime" pre- ceding its opening in New York Dec. 28. A perfectly balanced cast of 10 people built up a group portrait of the Fred Perkins household, and Sarah Pierce and William Rice car- ried the climatic scene in which the meaning and drama of the whole build-up is brought to a focus to the curtain on the first act. The au- dience sat tense and silent, and then burst into the kind of spontaneous applause that is usually reserved for the final curtain of a play. I do not know what the expectation, of the audience was. I had read the script a few hours before, and forgot my expectations in the reality of the play as projected by Play Produc- tion's actors from the stage. That, I think, is the best one can record both for a play and for a production. A good play in the hands of a good director and cast grows into a life in the theatre than can never be fully foreseen from a script. After that first act curtain there was no doubt about the grip of the play upon the audience. 'The co- operation of the audience (for the audience takes part in what is created in the theatre) was felt, I think, on the stage, and the cast gained in confidence and grip in meeting the challenge of a first pro- duction. All the parts are good parts, and an harmonious distinc- tion was achieved in every interpre- tation. In the space permitted I am inclined to mention especially those who were meeting expanded oppor- tunity in Play Production perform- ance, the utterly convincing and delicate rendering of the part of the grandmother by Margaret Grable, and the dramatic sincerity and ef- fectiveness of William Rice in the sustained part of Dave, the young husband. "The Good Old Summertime" is not a play primarily about the de- pression, but a play about the effects of the depression on the Perkins fam- ily, crammed together jobless under the one roof remaining in the family. The depression is the background, the opposing environment, for familiar characters striving after intimately appealing human ends. Broad so- cial and economic considerations are hardly touched upon, and the con- ditions since 1929 are viewed as a test of character. Some are whipped and some are not. Joe disintegrates. the gallantry of Sally and the em- barrassed, defiant courage of Dave, and their love for each other are strained to the breaking point, but hold. Mr. Flavin reveals a glory in the sheer tensile strength of a simple, normal human relationship. Pressed a little further, the beauty in the lives of Sally and Dave might have been irrevocably broken for them- selves, but not forrtheaudience. Mr. Flavin does not take such a course, nor does he solve the prob- lem of Sally's and Dave's lives satis- factorily. He merely sends them away to Chicago with a pat on the back and an illusory suggestion that all will be well. Economic reflections will tend to crop up upon reflection. Perhaps for the emotional siutation in the theatre, his cheery, if not happy, ending is satisfactory, but it is good theatre rather than good drama. There has been enough meat in the play, however, without the ending, not only in the central drama of Sally and Dave, but in the whole entangle- ment of humor and tendarnec ath