PAGE TWO THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAL V MOWT)AV 7TTlgW 17 109Q I a A - - - - . - . - - - - - - - i AA. \ i~* i U%-I 1 1 '1A -]j \ A 1_,P fl2 117 1 n n a 1 ^T E- - 0ir umuurr Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively. en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and therlocal news pub- lished herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $x.5o; by mail $2.00 Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan.- EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 21214 MANAGING EDITOR LAWRENCE R. KLEIN Editorial Director...........Howard F. Shout Women's Editor...........Margaret Eckels City Editor............Robert L. Sloss Music and Drama Editor.. R. Leslie Askren Books Editor............ Lawrence R. Klein Night Editor Howard F. Shout S. Cadwell Swanson Assistants Noah W. Bryant Edna Henley rs Walter Wilds Harold Warren Ledru Davis the body will bring no little dis- appointment to the student body. That the ban during its past two years of existence has been a success, there is no doubt. This is due to the rigid but not altogether unfair method of enforcement from the offic& of the Dean of Students.j That ^it has proved unpopular is equally doubtless. And not a shade of a doubt clings about the fact that the entire student body, reach- ed in its entirety by the sweeping effect of the ban, has proved its willingness to cooperate with the administration in the enforcement methods. At the time when the auto ban was introduced to the campus it was promised that a plan of mod- ification would be gradually intro- duced as soon as it was deemed! feasible by the administration. The almost complete success of the ban during the past two years has seemed to The Daily to be sufficient warrant for the modification pro- cess, affecting at the most the stu- dents in graduate schools. There remains only the weary task of extenuating the argument. It is not the policy (and never has been) of The Daily to advocate the complete removal of the ban, al- lowing every student to drive, but instead to place in effect the plan of modification, affecting first the students in professional and grad- uate schoos and lastly juniors and seniors of the literary college. It is difficult to maintain this policy in the light of administrative and public opinion, wherein The Daily is judged as a representative of puerile student opinion yelling for freedom and release from control. Our policy, however, remains stead- fastly the same.- ----o £ 1 ML L .1U J4LP'LcU.L1i IJ o 0 LOCALLY1 With the resources of this vast institution given over quite to the business of graduating this year's product of the educational mill, and doing it as "beautifully" and im- pressively as possible so that the quaking Senior knees at facing the cold hard world will not play a* death rattle too loudly through the hymns to Alma Mater and what- not that will grace the occasion, the spirit of ithe drama retires, perhaps a bit grimly, in favor of the scholastic amenities. It seems a bit of a shame to tease the old lady for news; any1 one who has followed' the situation locally will admit that Dame Drama is entitled to a rest. But the grim- I ness with which she has retired' from 'the limelight suggests that' instead of iesting she is really ma- turing further plans for local ex- citement, in which case it mightj be well to have the situation fa- miliarly in mind. The major activity will be that" of the Michigan Repertory Players which Play Production is sponsor- ing for the Summer Session. This repertory group will include a num- ber of students who have been teaching dramatic technique dur- I ing the regular school year and are anxious to find new ideas in! summer work. With them will be a number of students from the reg- ular school year who, too, are tak- ing their dramatic work seriously enough to keep them in Ann Ar- bor for the summer months. The result would seem to be Play Pro- duction going very serious mind- ed. v- Miic;d- A nt4 T rama I to L jo y '.7 i t .Z7 i' BUSINESS MANAGER Telephone 4925 LAWRENCE E. WALKLEY Assistant Business .............. Vernor Davis George Spater Accounts Manager............Egbert Davis Circulation Manager............Jeanette Dale Issue Editor-WALTER WILDS MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1929 AVE ATQUE VALE Two weeks ago, in addressing the graduating seniors of the Massa-1 chusetts Institute of Technology, Prof. Robert E. Rogers, of the Eng- lish department of that school, ad- monished his audience to affect a bold front in facing the world and, in short, to be what he himself termed a social "snob."Professor Rogers made no reference to the maintenance of arx intellect. Today some 2,000 Michigan men and women sever official connec- tion with the University. Whether or not they travel their various lanes of endeavor under the shal- low guise of social snobbery is, we believe, a matter of individual tem- perament. People cannot blandly announce "I am now to become a snob" and thereupon complete the metamorphosis. Fundamentals of character are ingrained and firmly implanted before a person reaches, the age of graduation. By that time it is too late to become a .snob or to refrain from snobbishness. feature of E'eltoxn swiitsiu Above is pictured a Pelton suit cut open to show the "Brassiere-In." It's a sewed-in one piece brassiere of same material and color as the suit. It neatly encases, lifts up and supports the bust, enhancing your appearance on the beach as well as giving wonderful comfort in swim- ming. No shoulder straps or back pieces. A patented Pelton idea. a a r Its shiape Pelton suits are excellent valu"s because of the standard quality two-ply yarn used and careful workmanship. They hold their shape throughout the season and give maximum wear. OALKINS-FLETCHER DRUG 00M 324 S. State Street State and Packard Streets East and South University Shorthan Calculat nd, Dictaphone, Typ or, Bookkeeping, Pen Secretarial Training ewriting, manship, June 17 or 24-August 16 Write your name and address here for further information. Name ...................... ...... Address................ HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE i You Too may become capable by taking our thorough practical training. Be- come prepared for a splendid position with opportunity for advance- ment. SUMMER COURSES State and William Streets Ann Arbor ' I I Editorial Comment -1 SIZE OF THE UNIVERSE (From the New York Times) Einstein has given us a new con- ception of the universe. All that we see about and above us is as finite as any globe, because matter has the gravitational property of curv- ing space around it. It is utterly impossible for most of us to grasp either the reasoning or the con- clusion. We seem to find the infin- ite more comprehensible than the finite. But the astronomer has thrown the old infinite universe overboard because he must deal with realities. He stretches a math- ematical tape from star to star in an effort to measure the "radius, While it is impossible to mask of curvature of space-time" and' matured characteristics under false thus to determine the size of the pretentions and term the result cosmos.- natural snobbishness, as Professor A newcomer among these celest- Rogers would have us do, nothing ial surveyors is Dr. Ludwik Silber- could be more noble and more cred- stein. He created not a little stir itable on the part of a body of among astronomers and the twelve graduates than a bearing of intel- mythical wise men who alone were lectual snobbishness. Instead of supposed to understand relativity, "shaving every day," "keeping by announcing before the American clothes pressed, and lots of them," Physical Society that the radius of and 'acting like a gentleman," in- space is but a paltry five million stead of 'marrying for social posi- light-years. Hence the universe tion," "affecting superiority," and must be smaller than most Ein- "joining good clubs, even if you can steinians insist. The estimate is not afford them," the graduate not to be lightly dismissed. It has could force himself farther up the been trebly verified by applying a ladder of social esteem, both in his governing formula to one group ofI own opinion and that of his critic, 35 stars, another of 29, and a thirdJ if he would, on the eve of his grad- of 246. All three computations are uation, undergo a mental house- in pleasing but none-the less dis- cleaning, 'free his mind from can't," concerting agreement. learn to think independently and If Dr. Silberstein's work is ac- act accordingly. A society compos- cepted, astronomy will have to re- ed of such persons would be in- vise its methods of measuring stel- finitely more mentally aloof than lar distances and rewrite those the tribe of sycophants that wouldss do-chapters which deal with the struc- result from Professor Rogers' doc-i ture and size of the universe. Mod- trine. In place of attempting to'ern telescopes seem to have pene- inherit the earth and cram it down trated to the very borders of space their tasteless gullets, the gradu- in the Einsteinian sense. Far out ates should attempt an application lie faint nebulae, masses of gas of their cultural potentialities, an which have no relation to our own effort both naturally adaptable and Milky Way and which are therefore noticeably civilized, regarded as "island universes." Dr. And so we would leave the grad- Hubble of Mount Wilson and Pro- uate with this interpretation of fessor Shapley of Harvard estimate the value of snobbishness to the that some of them are 140 million world in which he lives. We feel light-years distant. Eitherl Dr. Sil- that if Michigan's graduating sen- .berstein's five million light-years lors would -leave their Alma Mater as the measure of the radius of possessing this viewpoint, they space is wrong, or the accepted would do much to counter-act what methods of estimating stellar dis- seriousness Professor Rogers' mes- tances must be revised-methods sage may have been taken with, which consist in applying the time-" honored principles of the surveyor, CONTINUED POLICY converting stars that vary in There will be no modification of brightness into plumb-lines and the present code of regulations gov- using the colors of distant suns as erning the operation of student au- yardsticks. tomobiles on the campus during the Fifteen years of arduous mathe-t school year of 1929-30, it was as- matical work by Shapley and others sured by Bert Watkins, clerk to may have to be discarded, and Har- the Board of Regents, following a vard may have to revise the splen-1 recess in their meeting last Fri- did ten-year program which it hast lay. This decision on the part of undertaken to follow in nnttino ha The leader of activities will be Prof. Chester M. Wallace, head of the Drama Department at Carne- gie. institute of Technology and visiting director of Play Produc- tion's activities for the summer. Di- rector Windt insists on staying in the background and letting the full glare of publicity fall on his old time teacher and personal friend, himself serving merely as assistant to Prof. Wallace. The introduction of Prof. Wallace's methods into thej stream of campus producing will be a case of getting back to the! original fountain head of the in- J fluence which has molded Mr. Windt's efforts, and should be a valuable experience as well for stu- dents as for audiences. Producing rights have been se- cured by Mr. Windt for ten plays. Only seven of these will be given, choice from the ten being determ- ined by the possibility of casting from the repertory group. The Cassilis Engagement -Sir John Hankin Escape .......John Galsworthy The Good Hope -Herman Heijermans Smart Alec and Amaryllis Carroll Fitzhugh Redemption ........ Leo Tolstoy Children of the Moon -Martin Flavin The Show Off......George Kelly The Dover Road .... A. A. Milne Craig's Wife ......George Kelly The opening bill is announced as "The Cassilis Engagement," which is St. John Hankin's old-time fav- orite, a satiric study of romantics on an English country estate. The general theme is the essential im- portance of a common background of ideas and training for marriage as opposed to romantic infatuation. This, late in the Victorian era, when Love was a great big value in Life, and intellectual young ladies puck- ered lily brows and asked their whiskered "callers" if they didn't think, after all, that love is every- thing. The Romantic Ideal has subsided sufficiently until now it lingers mainly in popular lyrics about "cottages small" and "dream houses" and similar intellectual bric-a-brac, but Hankin's play stands out, a signpost of not too bygone ideas, but primarily as de- lightful entertainment. But with the concluding perfor- mance of "The Firebrand" last Sat- urday night by the Henderson- managed and Evans-directed group of semi-pros dramatic activities have been suspended until the white knicker crowd of summer stu- dents arrive to stir stings up in their inimitable collegiate way and Play Production's season gets un- der way. '"i : c - SE] THE TURI The very latest in S Summer MIII: I$ SILKS woven expressly for summer apparel, With patterns in the very spirit of summer. Chosen in styles that make the most of the beautiful designs. The floral printed tub silk ifss1arm1 ingenue i SAN 'mart nery E fa s h i n n4 c hA r m h i o g i n rG frocks without sleeves. More d 0 r R 1 1 t C conventionalp rints in darker combinations are usedfor.,en- semble modes. Rough textured tub silks for he cool informal sports frocks. A fascinating collection awaits your approval. Prices are modest. Sizes and Styles for W m n and Misses R. L. A. distribution and distances of clus- ters, novae and nebulae in an effort to find out what are the structure and limits of the universe. JACOB SON I S - -- .r _ .__. _._ - . --- .. - a a --- -0 Vas 4 SiG 1