THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the autho ity of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session 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. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mall matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, 1p4.00; by mail, $4.50. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING Y National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADiSON AVE. NEWYORK. N.Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON - SAN FANCISCO Los ANGELES . PORTLAND SEATE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ................ELSIE A. PIERCE EDITORIAL DIRECTOR ......MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins NIGHT EDITORS: Joseph Mattes, William E. Shackleton Irving Silverman, William Spaller, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. SPORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, chairman; Fred Deano, Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman, Carl Gerstacker. WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wuerfel chairman; lizabeth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas, Barbara J. Lovell, Katerine Moore, Betty Strickroot. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER.................JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER...JEAN KEINATH BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy Buekwalter, Marshal Sampson, Robert Lodge, Bill1 Newnan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layne, Russ Cole, Henry Homes, Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy, Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers J. Cameron Ha, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore, National Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. "Wlsher Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert' Falender, Publications and Class- Sified Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM SHACKELTON Lo, The Poor Liberal. * WHAT is a liberal?" A cave of the winds, a man who leaves the room when the fighting begins, one who thinks some- thing should be done but does nothing. The poor liberal has taken a beating, from the right-and from the left, in the Spring Par- ley, in recent magazinle articles, everywhere. Erst- while liberals are now calling themselves "pro- gressives" which means the same thing but lacks the flabby connotations of the former tag. Why the beating? For one thing, as Heywood Broun put it, "a lot of funny liberals are coming up out of the cracks these days." Most everyone can set up shop and hang out a sign as a liberal, so long as he believes in God and voted for Roose- velt in the last election. People who wish to oppose the President's Court Proposal invariably begin "Though I am a liberal . . ." Socialists are liberals, most Democrats, and some Republicans. The Communist party is now convinced that it will get farther in the long run working with their milder breatliren, and so many a beard and bomb is concealed beneath a liberal cassock. The church is also liberal You can understand, therefore, why no one wants to be a liberal. In his very lively column in the Nation, Broun has of late taken several jabs at the magazine for its liberalism. First, he complains, they print an article on one side, and then they print an article on the other. "What's the use?" says Brown. "There are times when a liberal must close the windows and pull down the shades lest his mind become a cave of the winds." In short, Broun wants the Nation to take an attitude on a specific question, to fight for it, tooth and nail, hammer and tongs, till the enemy drops. Enough of this shilly-shallying liberal- ism! Be another New Masses! The problem is of course one of definition, and a definition of liberalism involves both method and content, as was pointed out in one of the sessions of the Parley. As a method, liberalism involves a faith in the function of free in- quiry. As a doctrine, liberalism might perhaps be called "experimental collectivism." With this sketchy attempt at a definition, we venture to say what few men dare-that Broun is wrong. For Broun, sick though he is of this bending over backwards to see both sides, under- estimates the function of truly liberal journals. The Nation ought of course to take a stand on the Court plan, as it has done. It ought not, of course, to open its columns to anything anyone has to say on any side. But there are still places for journals which can serve as arenas in which ideas can fight between themselves, to let the victor' arise by virtue of its demonstrable su- periority as truth. The difference between a doctrinaire journal such as Broun would like the Nation to be, and the Nation as it is, is that the former makes certain assumptions which the MayFestival SECOND CONCERT (Thursday, May 13, 8:30 p.m.) By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER OVERTURE to "Leonore" No. 3, Op. 72-Beet- heven. Of the four overtures which Beet- hoven composed for his sole opera, Fidelio, the "Leonore No. 3" is by far the best known-not in its original capacity as a prelude to the opera, but as a separate, compact, symphonic peroration of the dramatic content of the whole work. Wag- ner, in his essay on Beethoven, wrote: " . .. What is the dramatic action of the librettist's opera Leonore but an almost repulsive watering of the drama we have lived through in the Overture, a kind of tedious commentary by Gervinus on a scene of Shakespeare's?" Yet that the Overture owes its first allegiance to an organic, symphonic style rather than to a freer dramatic one is shown by the fact that after the two off-stage trumpet calls-which from a dramatic standpoint provide a conclu- sive climax-Beethoven anti-climactically per- mits a full recapitulation, in order to satisfy the purely structural demands for a repetition of the thematic material. Although the Leonore No. 3 is known today mostly as a concert piece, it is frequently played as an entr'acte in the performance of Fidelio. RIZE SONG from "The Mastersingers of Nur- ewburg"-Wagner. Whereas Max, in Der Fre schutz, acquires his bride as prize in a con- test of marksmanship, Walther, the young knight-aspirant to the august guild of the Mas- tersingers, wins his Eva in a contest of song. Having beheld a vision of ideal beauty, Walther transforms his dream into a master-song, with which, in the final scene of the music drama, he wins the coveted prize. Conforming to the some- what strict rules of the Mastersingers, the song consists of three strophies. The first describes the wondrous garden wherein Walther first be- held Eva, his earthly Paradise; the second tells of the sacred fount which guided his steps to- ward Parnassus and his inspiring muse; and the third exalts both Paradise and Parnassus-Love and Poetry-which to him are combined in the image of Eva. First Forging Song from "Siegfried"-Wagner. Trh scene is the closing one of the first act of Siegfried, deep in the forest cavern where Mime has his smithy. Siezing from the groveling and impotent dwarf the fragments left him of his father Siegmund's powerful sword, Siegfried sets to work to forge Nothung anew. As he works, above the groan of the bellows and the roar of the fire he sings a boisterous and exhilarating apostrophe to the blade with which -he is to conquer the dragon and win his way to the sleeping Brunhilde. This first, song, sung while Siegfried is filing and melting the fragments of steel preparatory to the actual forging, is often known as the Song of the Bellows, to distinguish it from the second, or Forging Song, with which he later accompanies his blows at the anvil. The Seasons-Eric Fogg. By the age of seven- teen Schubert had written The Erl King, and Mendelssohn the Midsummer Night's Dream Overture. At that age Eric Fogg had composed nothing which could quite compare with those masterpieces, but what he lacked in quality he made up for in quantity, with 60 opus numbers to his name. Born at Manchester, England, in 1903, Fogg began at the age of ten to gather mu- sical experience, which came from his activities as choir boy and later as organist, as well as from his work in composition. His outstanding teacher in the latter field was Granville Bantock, who led him away from his earlier dependence on Stravinsky toward a more personal and elastic style. THE SEASONS, which so far is Fogg's most comprehensive work, was composed for the Leeds Festival of 1931. For chorus and orches- tra, with no soloists, the work is a comparatively literal setting of the eighteenth century poems of William Blake dealing with each of the four sea- sons. It is, however, more a choral symphonic poem than a vocal work with orchestral accom- paniment. The extensive modern orchestra re- quired is used actively both in the vocal passages and in the numerous introductions and inter- ludes, as a vital agent in translating into musical terms the spirit and' effect of the poems. Thus the contrasting moods of the various poems are admirably caught-the lyrical passion of Spring, the more indolent reverie of Summer, the robust vigor of Autumn, and the stark,'brutal bleakness of Winter. Excerpts from "Parsifal"-Wag'ner. Perhaps no other single musical work has occasioned the spilling of so much ink as has Parsifal-and perhaps there is no other piece of music which has greater need of extra-musical data as an aid to a full understanding of its virtues. It has been said that Parsifal is the final expres- sion of Wagner's philosophical and religious con- ceptions; that it represents a sort of musical death-bed conversion (the score was finished in /1882, the seventieth and last year of the com- poser's life), a return to Christian spirituality after the pagan mythology of The Ring and the Schopenhauerian philosophy of Tristan. And, although Parsifal gives evidence of Budd- histic and Schopenhauerian influence as well X16 Christian, it is obvious that it is much more close- ly related to the Christian religion than are any, other of Wagner's works. Not only is it based on the myths relating to the Holy Cup from which Christ drank at the Last Supper, but the term used by the composer to designate it is not "opera," "music drama," or even "Fes- tival drama," but "stage consecrating festival drama." Thus the stage becomes, for Wagner, not the usual setting for entertainment or even for ordinary artistic enjoyment, but the medium for an expression of the most exalted character -akin to the theatre of the ancient Greeks, which was opened only en sacred feast days, and THE 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 be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or rejecttletters upon the criteria of generalaeditorial importance and interest to the campus. To Keep Us Out Of War... . . To the Editor : One way to help maintain peace-if that is at all possible-is to enact a law eliminating war profits. That is the great need of the hour. Sev- eral bills before Congress aim to lay down rules' and regulations' for the country in wartime. One of these bills-the Sheppard-Hill bill-is easy on capital and contains no clause concern- ing war profits; the other-the Nye-Maverick bill-shows less favor to capital and advocates high taxes. Both bills are so worded as to lead readily to dictatorship in wartime. A second way to help insure peace is the ref- erendum by the people on the grave decision of war. Such a referendum is all the more justified since 'in modern warfare not only the fighting men but the entire civilian population is liable, to suffer greatly as was seen abundantly during the World War and may now be seen in the present ghastly war in Spain. Every available means should be used to keep us out of war- the greatest of all crimes. In an article in the Nation of May 1, 1937, Mr. Oswald Garrison Villard predicts that if we do get into the next war, it will mean the disappearance of our de- mocracy. Of all the reasons for our keeping out of the next war, the threat to our democracy is the strongest. In this connection it is worth noting that in Canada a law was recently enacted according to which the government is in complete control of the munitions industry and all raw material that may be used in the manufacture of arma- ments, no airplane, no revolver, no poison gas can be exported without a license from the govern- ment, in peace as well as in war. It will supervise the 'traffic down to, the smallest detail and may perhaps even direct the output of factories. France has done even better than Canada in that the government has taken over the large Schneider Creusot munition works. Why is the munitions industry in the United States in the hands of private firms? -M. Levi. THE SCREEN Personal Property DRAMA Publication in the Bulletin is cont Program Notes iverity. Copy received at the e Prc~i'fm 1 t~PS tu 7:'30; 11:00 am. o Saturdy. By KENNETH ROWE Of the English Department) (Continued from Page 2) - The 1937 Ann Arbor Dramatic Sea- Department of Romance Languages son approaches, and with its passing a p12 R.L.) at least one week inuad- second college generation will have van2e.L.sto b s oe n dd come and gone since the year when vance. Lists of books recommendedS Robert Henderson brought Margaret by the various departments are ob- Anglin in Antigone and Mrs. Richard tamable at this office. Mansfield in The Royal Family to It is desirable that candidates for Ann Arbor. One realizes that the the doctorate prepare to satisfy thisd Dramatic Season is now an institu- r equirement at the earliest possibleF tion with a history. date. A brief statement of the na- That first 1930 season originated ture of the requirement, which will in the imagination and was made ac- he found helpful, may be obtainedt tuality by the energy of Robert Hen- at the office of the Department, and derson, who has been known for his further inquiries may be addressed single-minded devotion to the the- to Mr. L. F. Dow (100 R.L., Satur-L atre from the days when he acted, 'ays at 10 a.m. and by appointment). organized productions, and wrote the This announcement applies only Daily drama column as a student at to candidates in the following de- the University of Michigan. If we are partments: Ancient and Modern ever inclined to take the opportunity Languages and Literatures, History,t for five weeks each spring of con- Economics, Sociology, Political Sci-f tinuous professional theatre, with ence, Philosophy, Education, Speech,s distinguished casts and plays, for Journalism. granted as belonging, somehow, bys right to Ann Arbor, we should looko back to 1930. The announcement Concert that Miss Anglin, especially, should May Festival Concerts: May Fes- come to Ann Arbor in Antigone was ival concerts will take place as fol-2 almost unbelievable. Miss Anglin was lrsks one of the foremost actresses of the lWdnesday May 12 8:30 p.m. Kir- American theatre, and Antigone was ,ten Flagstad, soloist. Philadelphia the Dart of all parts in which one Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy, con- would wish to see her. Mr. Hen-sc derson had no American precedents doctor.a in 1930 for creating such a drama Thursday, May 13, 8:30 n.m. Lau-t festival. Salzburg and Malvern were :itz Melchior, soloist. Miscellaneous in his mind; the theatre in the United orchestral numbers. First Americane States was at the height, or depth, performance of "The Seasons" by of its concentration in New York City. logg. Excerpts from Wagner's "Pa- Two years later summer theatres isifal." Philadelphia Orchestra and with professional casts rather sud- the Choral Union; Eugene Ormandy denly blossomed forth in the East, mnd Earl V. Moore, conductors. and the movement has been grow- Friday, May 14, 2:30 p.m. EugeneI ing ever since. They are still con- List, pianist, soloist. Miscellaneoust centrated, for the most part, in the wrchestral numbers. Young People'sc East, and the Ann Arbor season, fol- -estival Chorus and the Philadelphia1 lowing the original conception of Mr. Orchestra. Eugene Ormandy andr Henderson, maintains a unique char- Roxy Cowin, conductors.r acter. The summer theatres orig- Friday, May 14, 8:30 p.m. Elisabeth inated and continue to exist very gen- Rethberg and Ezio Pinza, soloists. erally for the sake of the actors, a Miscellaneous, artist program. Phila- combination of vacation under the delphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy,f apple blossoms, a means of subsis- conductor.t tence, and practice ground for pro- Saturday, May 15, 2:30 p.m. Jo-i fessional people of the theatre. The reph Knitzer, violinist, soloist. Phil-r Ann Arbor season is for the audi- adelphia Orchestra, Jose Iturbi, con- ence, essentially a festival like those ductor.t I at Salzburg and Malvern, an annual Saturday, May 15, 8:30 p.m. Solo-t feast of dramas a community event. ists: Elisabeth Rethberg, Thelmat Like its European predecessors, and Lewis, Marion Telva, Arthur Carron, like our own older May Music Fes- Carlo Morelli, Ezio Pinza. Verdi's tival, the Ann Arbor dramatic sea- 'Aida" with Philadelphia Orchestra son has expanded the community and the Choral Union. Earl V. Moore,F bounds, and brings together an audi- conductor. ence from neighboring cities within a dc . radius of well over a hundred miles.c Mr. Henderson conceived of some- Lectures thing more than a stock or a reper-' tory company. He plans a series of The Henry Russel Lecture: Dr. special events, for which distin- Charles Wallis Edmunds, professor oft guished artist are invited for special Materia Medica and Therapeutics,7 parts, sometimes, as Mist Anglin in will deliver the annual Henry Russelt Antigone, a part for which the actor Lecture at 4:15 p.m., Thursday, May >r actress is already famous, some- 13, in the Natural Science Auditorium. times for a happy conjunction of His subject will be "Experimentalx artist and part which Mr. Hender- Studies on Diphtheria Toxin." On son has imagined but which has never this occasion also announcement of before been realized. the Henry Russel Award for 1936-37 The history of the Dramatic Sea- will be made.1 son has been continuously creative. The Electra, with Blanche Yurka and University Lecture: Prof. Napierc Martha Graham, was startling, espe- Wilt of the University of Chicago, cially after Margaret Anglin's class- will lecture on "Bartley Campbell, ical rendering of Greek tragedy the American Dramatist" today at 4:15v preceding year. Miss Yurka remind- p.m. in 1025 Angell Hall. The public'r ed us of the primitive and savage is cordially invited. originsof the themes of Greek trag- edy; she was pre-Homeric. The University Lectures: On May dances of Martha Graham, in the 11 and 12, Dr. W. H. Bucher, chair-. modern primitivist mode, in place of man of the department of geologyF the traditional chorus, were exactly and geography, University of Cin- attuned in uncouth and bitter pas- cinnati, and exchange professor, will sion to Miss Yurka's interpretation, lecture on the deformation of ther That production of Electra was the- earth's crust. Following are the titles,f atrical history, experimental and con- times, and places of his lectures. troversial, certainly an exciting ad- * * * dition to experience of drama. P 1. University Lecture: The Hartl With Violet Heming and Tom Pow-~ Mountain Overthrust today at 4:15 ers in Private Lives, Mr. Henderson p.m. in Natural Science Auditorium.c broke the superstition that Noel Cow- 2. Orogenic deformation and the ard's play depended upon the acting nature of horizontal movements, of Noel Coward and Gertrude Law- today at 8 p.m. in Room 2054, Na- rence for success. The play was bril- todayat 8cenp.minRo 204Na liantlyfdone here, and Miss Hemingtural Science. was better than Miss Lawrence in ;3. Epeirogenic deformation and thet the part. The demonstration was nature of its major rhythm, Wednes- continued with Design for Living the day, May 12, at 4:15 p.m. in Room following year, 1932. Mr. Coward 2054, Natural Science. writes too well for his parts to de- UI pend upon a single interpreter. It is University Lecture: Bertil Ohlin, a privilege to see an actress so charm- professor of economics in the School ing, and so meticulous an artist, as of Business Administration, Stock- Patricia Collinge at any time, but the holm, Sweden, will lecture on "Swe- c selection of Shaw's Candida for her dish Economic Policy in Boom and1 seemed especially fortunte. In fact, Depression" at 4:15 p.m. on Monday, from the many Candidas I have seen, May 17, in Natural Science Audi-! it is Candida as created by Miss Col- torium. The public is cordially in- linge that remains Candida in my vited.r mind. Incidentally, Mr. Henderson played Marchbanks, and when the Mathematics Lectures: Dr. J. S. Ann Arbor Candida went to Boston, Neyman of University College, Lon-j the late H. T. Parker of the Boston don, will give a series of three lee- Transcript stated his Marchbanks to! tures on the "Theory of Statistics." be the best that had been seen in The first lecture of the series will be this country. An instance of casting given on Wednesday, May 12, at 4:15, genius was Violet Kemble-Cooper in p.m. in Room 3017 Angell Hall. Sub- The Vinegar Tree and later in The sequent lectures will probably occur Mad Hopes. Miss Kemble-Cooper on Thursday and Friday at the same3 was so distinguished as a great ac- time. tress of tragic dignity and passion that the parts seemed almost un-xhibitionI imaginable for her. She was revealed as a great comedienne: in fact, one Exhibition, College of Architec- wanted to see her in all the tradi- ExitonCleg ofActc- tional parts of Mary Boland. One ture: An exhibition of the student1 could go on with Madame Leon~tovichl1work in design from member schools and Rollo Peters in And So To Be, of the Association of Collegiate and many others, but undoubtedly Schools of Architecture, among which+ the greatest achievement was the in- is mcluded the University of Michi- troduction of Nazimova as Mrs. Alv- ga College of Architecture, is being ing in Ghosts, in 1935. Nazimova has in the third floor exhibition AL BUJILETIN tructive notice to ali members of the .e t. Asitat to th.SPrtsid..t Romance Languages Journal Club: The last meeting of this year will take place today at 4:10 p.m. in Room 108 R.L. The program will be the following: Some recent studies of the Song of Roland by Professor Knudson. Une edition modele: Correspon- dance Generale de Sainte-Beuve par F. Bonnerot by Professor Denkinger. Psychology Journal Club meets this evening at 7:45 p.m. in Room 3126, Natural Science Building. Mr. Gebhard will report on Lewin, and Mr. Gilbert will reort on J. F. Brown. The Mathematics Club will meet this evening at 8 p.m. in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Mr,. R. W. Wagner will speak on "Multiple valued functions in matrix spaces." Mr. J. V. Wehau- sen will speak on "Some properties of topological linear spaces." The Deutscher Verein meets today at the Michigan Union in Rooms 319- 21. The meeting begins promptly at 8 p.m. The business meeting will be followed by dancing. The U. of M. Skippers, a 5-piece or- chestra will furnish the music. The meeting is open to all who are in- terested. Refreshments will be served. The purpose of the meeting is to elect off ioers 'for next year. Adelphi House of Representatives. meets this evening at 7:30 p.m. in the Adelphi Room. Election of the Honor Award winner will be made at that time as well as nomination of officers. The meeting is a very im- portant one, and will be short. All members areurged to attend this meeting which is the last regular meeting of the year. A.S.M.E. Members: Election of of- ficers for next year will be held this evening, at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union instead of Wednes- day evening as previously planned. All members are urged to attend this important meeting, for details of the trip into Detroit on May 20 will be given. Kappa Kappa Psi: Regular meeting of Kappa Kappa Psi, National Band Fraternity, will be in the Union at noon today. Formal pledging will be conducted. The Scandinavian Student Club will meet at the Union at 8 p.m. today to elect officers for the coming year. The room number will be posted on the Union bulletin board. Kappa Phi: Meeting today at 5:15 p.m. at Stalker Hall. Catholic Students: There will be a Chapel Benefit Dance from 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. this evening for Catholic students and their friends in the au- ditorium of St. Mary's Student Chapel. Late permission until 11 p.m. has been obtained for University women attending the affair. Girls need not be escorted. Lutheran Bible Class will meet this evening at 7:15 p.m. at the League. Everyone is invited to come. Key Dance dommittee will meet to- night at 7:30 p.m. at Dean Ray's of- fice. Christian S c i e n c e Organization meets tonight at the chapel of th Michigan League at 8:15 p.m. Stu- dents and faculty members are in- vited to attend. The Bibliophiles, Faculty Women's Club, will meet today at 2:30 p.m. at the Michigan League, hostesses Mrs. Edwin E. Slosson and Mrs. Preston W. Slosson. Coming Events A.S.C.E. Election Meeting: The stu- dent chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers will hold its an- nual election meeting in Room 311 West' Engineering Building, Wednes- day night, May 12, at 7:30 p.m. There is much important business to be dis- cussed, and it is desirable that all members be there so as to make next year's officers representative of the organization. Michigan Technic Tryouts: The examination for admission to the staff of The Michigan Technic will be held Wednesday night, May 12, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3046 East En- gineering Building. Please bringna large, size bluebook. Your letters of application are due immediately be- fore the examination starts. The Phi Eta Sigma initiation will be held this Wednesday, May 12, in the Union at 5 p.m. Each initiate must bring a large white handker- chief. Freshman Project: The grandchil- dfren of the cast will rehearse at 4:30 AT THE MICHIGAN W. S. Van Dyke, ace comedy director of Holl,.r wood, has turned in another fast and clever item in this light piece, perhaps one of his best. Senator-kissing Jean Harlow, who makes up in personality what she lacks in polish, carries off the role of creditor=pursued widow of an English big game hunter with her customary verve, while Robert Taylor plays the black sheep of Piccadilly Circus in the usual Taylor manner with the as- sistance of some well-worded script material. Taylor, just finished with a four-months' stay in jail, finds himself persona hardly grata at home where preparations for white sheep brother Reginald Owen's wedding are in the offing. He prefers London penniless to a fresh (300 pounds sterling) start in Australia offered by his father, E. E. Clive, and leaves. Stopping for a cocktail at his favorite hotel, whom does he run into but Harlow herself, pursues her to the opera and subsequently home, where a bailiff whose duty, is to keep Jean from cheating on her grocery bills swears him in as a sheriff's officer and leaves him to keep an eye on the furniture. Naturally it develops that brother Owen's fiancee and Miss Harlow are only one person, and it's no surprise who gets her in the end. Besides the superb directing and good dialogue, there is some fairly amusing if standard slap- stick on English manners, and a tricky implausi- bility about the whole thing that keeps it from going stale. The news reel includes shots of the Hinden- burg disaster, among the best news photography since the assassination of Alexander of Jugo- slavia in 1934. in itself can not. Music can and does express the sublime emotions which are the basis of religion, but intellectual dogmas are beyond its realm-as is shown by Strauss' attempt at a mu- sical translation of Nietsche in Thus Spake Zara-, thustra. And what is true of that work is true of Wagner's music: its success depends upon its power as sheer music, devoid of all intellectual trimmings. Although Wagner argued with all his might against it, his extra-musical theories were but the scaffolding by the aid of which his mighty musical edifices were erected; not, as he presumably thought, the reasons for their erec-" tion. The selections to be played on this program are taken from each of the three acts of Parsifal utilizing certain portions which are of the great- est worth as abstract music, and closing each time with the conclusion of the act. From Act I has been selected the music accompanying the. scenic transformation, (accomplished by means of rolled scenery moving across the stage) from a forest glade to a hall in the style of the Holy Grail, and that of the scene of the unveiling of the Cup and the consumamtion of the Eucharist. In Act II the start is made at the turning point I th +Ita nnP ro Aa rnn ah ih tnnr,,s'. i nno'nA