THE 8UIM WR MICSIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST I6, 1930. T H E U M M R M C U I G N D I L YS A T U D A Y A U U S T 6 , 9 3 0 Piiblisher every morning except Mond,,y dui ing the. Iniversity Summer Session byi the Board im Control of Student Publications. lie .- ,cd l'rc.s, is exclusively en- STAGE WHIMPER With Scant Apologies to Helen Carrm OAED RoLL SUMMER DAILY STAFF POSES FOR PHOTOGRAPH AS PANTING PUBLIC DEMANDS PEEK BACK OF SCENES C ' t 1 F t till uc or recjubhation of all news I Nertz. Having just come, my i t.c heC1" rtl to it or not otherwiseI r itd in this 1;agr m dthe lical news (dears, from a showing of that ped- , tl ished ul .trin. sredathAbo, icign.icular and pedantic but perfect play Enteredl 3t the A\nn Ar bor, Michigan-. postoflce as second class matter. called Dumas' "Three Musketeers," I am agog, if any. The subtlety, Subscription by carrier, $t.so; by mail, the charm, the interpretation is Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, just too, lice Winnie the Pooh. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Nertz. "All the performances were good" (Thank you, Mr. Gor- EDITOR*AL STAFF man) and I loved the way the mus- Telephoue 4925 keteers' hats kept falling off. "The MANAGING EDITOR dramatic version cuts the Dumas GURNEY WILLIAMS tinto a neat, rapid, joyous little - -stream of narrative." (Much oblig- Editorial Director.... aHoward . Shout ed Bill). Once during Thursday City Editor .........arold Warren, Jr.duigT rsa Women's Editor .... .....Dorothy Magee night's performance the King trip- Multsic and D ratna Editor.. William J. Gorman, books Editor..........Russell F. McCracken ped over his staff in a most undig- Sports Editor................Morris Targer nifled manner, and my dears, the Night Editors Denton Kunze Howard F. Shout ( way his lips moved as he stalked Powers Moulton Harold Warren, Jr. off the stage was simply frightful. Assistants lOh, my, my. C. H. Beukemna Constance A. McWethy Nertz. A little bird tells me that Helen Carrm Bertha Clayman little o1' New York is simply myaah When you pick up your copy of ting out the paper"? The Daily every morning do you Stop a moment and think. Each stop to consider the vast amount story has to be carefully written, a of labor that has been put into that headline has to be fitted to it, the paper? Do you, for instance (oryd any of your friends, for that mat- type has to read for errors, the ter), realize that four or five men night editor has to plan his page have broken all their dates, locked with all the care of an artist, and themselves up in The Daily office, each and every man on the staff and settled down to the serious must be on his toes from 5 o'clock business of drin - - I mean, "put- in the afternoon until nearly 1. '1 i Bruce Manley Sher M. QuraishiI BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER3 GEORGE A. SPATER Assistant Business Managers William R. Worboys Harry S. Ilenjamin Circulation Manager......... Bernard Larson Secretary..................Ann W. Verner Assistants - Joyce Davidson Delia M. Kidd Dorothy Dunlap T 16, 1930. SATURDAY, AUGUS' Night Editor--Gurney Williams Night Editor-Harold Warren, Jr. Night E1d;itor--l)cnton Kune e Night Editor--Howard F. Shout Night Editor-Powers Moulton A TYPOGRAPHICAL REVOLUTION when it comes to shows. And I shell be very much disappointed if I can't set meh orbs on at least one good play when I get back in New York. Of course I'm going back. Yes, I live in little old New York. Oh my yaaaws. I live there. In I New York. EEmagine! Nertz. I I I I I I I I(That will take care of this paragraph). j Nertz. Puh-leaze, Mr. Shubert! Nertz. What with my puerileI mind and all, isn't it just too for- tunate that Bill Gorman's reviews ALWAYS appeared the day before mine did? Ihopt you weren't an- noyed. Or are you? Have we? Where was I? Little ol' New York. Yaaws. Nertz. And now, my dears, I! simply must-if any. Nertz. -__ Screen Reflections We hope the readers of the pa- per this morning will notice that there are an unusual number of mistakes and inaccuracies, for be THE PREVIEW of CLARA BOW in it known this is the long hearladed "cuckoo" edition. All the pent up and smooldering desires of the staff have been turned loose in this issue: typographical slips that the proof readers have always wanted to let go past, headlines with ambiguous meanings which the night editors have refused to accept from the long-suffering head writers, and all the errors that have been made this summer have been mobilized and marshalled in- to the rows of type for the bewil- derment of the subscribers. In adidtion, the suppressed desire of the certain ones of the male 'por- tion of the staff to write the Stage Whisper and Fashion Plate col- umns is at last being gratified, and Screen Reflections and the Books column is suffering from a rever- sal of the same idea. How many more upsets of the regular routine of the office ard contemplated in the machinations of these journal- istic rebels, we are not prepared to say. "Love Among The Milionaires": Majestic Theatre Tonight. Also, fairly comfortable seats and a newsreel. Clara is a symbol. Those highly compressed bulges of flesh (why did they have to come at the peak of my popularity she is said to have moaned) choked for the bene- fit of her fans, soda-clerks, Ford workers, and college students) withj a wvide, red "it" belt around the! equator.: the puffing stupidity of Hollywood trying to disguise itself with a lot of hot glare. Then, too, Clara is so damn stu- pid. Feminine attraction she sees as an exploitation of rotundity: hips describing voluptuous para- bolas, sillily rolling circles for eyes. With the ever-present tight belt, she looks like an hour-glass. And then that voice. A woman with 'eight children living in a ten- ement who likes everyone in on time for dinner is the only part she could do well with that voice. The Preview shows a cute boy murmuring to Clara: Can I be yourI In Memory of the Doctors Whoofle o'clock the next morning. Just try standing on your toes for 8 hours at a stretch and see what it all means. Even before you t y it we can assure you it means noth- ing. But for the benefit of readers who may wonder what a newspaper staff looks like we are taking this opportunity of presenting The Summer Daily staff 3* I Dorothy Magee, Women's Editor, in an informal pose. " William J. Gorman; Music & Dra- ma Editor. (Continued on Page 3) Gurney Williams, Managing Editor d There will very probably be only oraxeman. ((The tneme son some of those who secure a copy of is Rarin' to Go; and her lovers ar this edition who will fail to see any all brakemen) The next "shot" i logical reason for this typographi- the cute boy leaving by the train cal revolution. There are always a Clara is kissing him but finally few like that. For these individu- cries out in fear (which means sh als we will point out several rea- talks louder) that "she is afrai sons: The staff has suffered though". After that, Clara is seer through one of the hottest sum- "going" where she'd been rarin mers in history and can't be blamed but afraid to go. She's pretty wil for being a little "cuckoo" at this here and dissipated. But you sus stage of the game; it has covered pect that this isn't the real Clara meetings and lectures, and exhib- She is shouting to music on a tabl( ittions of the dramatic art that and dancing and exploiting ro were as dray as the weather, and tundity on that table, too. Thi, has managed to create news stories scene is quite worthwhile as a about them that were necessarily unique synthesis of all the techni- of an equal aridity; it has carried cal stupidities that make Claraa full time summer courses in the commercial asset. She was jus University while at the same time married. The picture runs unti spending in the neighborhood of Wednesday when another pictur six hours a day in the press offices; comes. Life is like that . W. J. G it has sacrificed almost all oppor- tunities for entertainment and rec- reation to do this; and finally, as we mentioned above, it has been ,W ha' forced to let pass, in the interests 1 of the paper numerous gems of wit o that arose in the routine publica- Giong tion. puc The "cuckoo" edition is not a On new idea by any means. It hasI long been the custom to make at - - - - least one edition of the Daily a Plenty. more or less humorous one. Any- '_ thing was goon on the night that paper went to press. Anyone hav- will be parodied; take off your ing a desire for a few hearty spectacles and forget your exami- chuckles is hereby invited to run nations. For this one day, at least, through the files of past years to be "cuckoo" along with the staff of look over the issues of like nature, the ]daily. And there you have it. Read We might add that all news la- every.word, we warn you, for every beled "Associated Press" is authen- word may be a potential bit of tic and has been inno way altered. hilarity; remember all the news Only local copy and feature mater- nf# tha oa4rle ih vn. lva 1o. A 'i i yitn111li n bi e nnran i Ig re a si n. y e id !n n' 'd le Is a! a t le Howard Shout, Editorial Director Harold Warren, City Editor C. H. Beukema and Helen Carrm, Star Reporter and Stage Whisper respecitvely. a A I George Spater, Businses Manager lbAbout Books Adventures of Grandfather Frog by Thornton W. Burgess. To be nauseatingly truthful, I see no reason why this book was writ- ten. For the children, you will say. But you're wrong. It was written for Thornton W. Burgess so that Thornton W. Burgess could eat. That's why. But that still is no rea- son for its being. To begin with, you meet a flair in the novelist in his delineation of character. Grandfather Frog was not the sweet, old simpering fool the author pictured him to be. And the Smiling Pool that Grandfather Frog jumped into each time that Old Whitetail the Marsh leaped af- ter him was not the Smiling Pool at all. No- It was the Grinning Drool, a pool of sin (or gin, as it is known in better circles.) This, apparently, is an obvious attempt at sentimentalizing for the sake of the kiddies, and perhaps, nourishment. As everyone knows, old Grandaddy Frog was a rake of the first water who frequented the Grinning Drool, became leeringly snozzled at every opportunity, and ate foolish green flies for chasers. The author's feeble attempts at melodrama are irritating to an ex- tent. Observe the following pas- sage: "There the fish stuck, and gulp' and swallow as hard as he could, Grandfather Frog couldn't make that fish go a bit farther. Then he tried to get it out again, but it had gone so far down his throat that he couldn't get it back. Grandfath- er Frog began to choke." (Contin- ued in next chapter.) This, I emphasize, is bad for the children. Let us suppose that we are reading to Junior just one chapter. Then what? Must Grand- father Frog choke all night? No, I tell you-it's grim reality Junior wants-but he wants it now, not tomorrow night. Burgess is no psychologist or dramatist in any sense of the word. Too, he is more interested in how he tells the story than in its con- tent. His detail is slightly too dog- matic, however, it is such delightful dogmatism that one does not mind. To call it darnable would be nec-j essarily mild. Let us rather call it damnable. For example, "Grandfather Frog's head ached,' for you know he was hanging head down." Grandfather Frog was drunk again, but here once more the author evades the issue. Why not explain gently to the children by suggesting flowers and bees and things. The entire book is done in an artificial manner; the dialogue is trite and unoriginal. Burgess fails to look life straight in the face and ,,,,, 4 yoeSI (A, $CA SHIRT HEADQUARTERS GRUEN WATCHES DIAMONDS HALLER'S Jewelers State Street at Liberty WATCH REPAIRING FINE JEWELRY ' k htk4 4 a*4t d $ £oc 'l diA 'altr e hb , i e .s4 NO CLIMB NO NO C.P/o.13 CREEP STRANGLE O UR guaranteed Arrow shirt-sleeves don't shrink 'way up your wrists -or you get your money back. Our guaranteed Arrow shirt-tails don't shrink 'way short-or you get your money back. Our guaranteed Arrow collars don't shrink and strangle-or you get your money back. And all the money that you pay for this guaranteed fine $ *95 broadcloth shirt is * * * vA /f 8 A r ,, "I -I Il