PACE TWvO THE SUMMER. MUGHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1931 PAGEThO HE SMME MICIGANDAIL TUSDAY JUL,28,193 aUt flwmmnr Publishet$ every morning except Monday duri the ,niversi Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis- patdes credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, posty office as second class matter. camps are a waste of government money and the basis for their ex- istence is out of line with the poli- cies of the United States. It is to be hoped that the War Department cuts will necessitate their discon- tinuance. -0- What Others Say Subscription by carrier, $1.50; by mail, $1.75. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Telephones: Editorial, 4925; Business 2-1214. EDITORIAL STAFF MANAGING EDITOR HAROLD 0. WARREN, JR. Editorial Director ...........Gurney Williams ASSOCIATE EDITORS C. W. Carpenter Carl Meloy L. R. t h ia Sher M. Quraishi Barbara Hall Eleanor Rairdon Charles C. Irwin Edgar Racine Susan Manchester Marion Thornton P. Cutler Showers BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM R. WORBOYS Assistant Business Manager .. Vernon Bishop Contracts Manager............. Carl Marty Ad et sing Manager......... Jack Bunting A cuns. Circulation .........Thomas Muir Night Editor-Gurney Williams TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1931 BUDGET a; n i tl I] n a S n f a t l; 1 t i t 1 4 THLE TICl MONEY (Niles Daily Star) Some people think that college and school students spend too much money for the expenses of athletics. Yet as long as the public continues to pour such great sums of money into the laps of these students, they naturally want to carry on the work of, these sports in a liberal fashion. Yale college last year, for instance, made a net profit of $636,000 on football. Many other colleges prob- ably had proportionately good re- turns. These students would hard- ly spenid that money on the ad- vancement of science and religion. If the students with the athletic tendency were not spending their vacant hours training for these games, they might go into far less desirable activities. If students are devoting too much attention tc these pursuits the best course would seem to be to reduce the length o their courses in schools and col- leges, and have them go to work at an earlier age. J0- JUNK eait r te, whatgwit allou ATED OLL / * TODAY IS FIELD DAY Ths column i getting easier and easierrec write, what with all our cousins, uncles, odd relatives, and constant readers (all relatives themselves) taking up lots of space and crowding out our Mammoth Se- rial. * * * WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE DAILY DEPT. Dear Drs: , The moaning you heard in The Daily office Sunday morning em- anted from the desk of the editor- ial director who was reading over the editorials he had written Sat- urday. The particular passage that 'pained him above all others-and most of them give him a pain, any- Sway-was: "In spite of tons of pub- ment will be left free to help itself acute emergency; that they all money kept in the sock is thepop sion.C For the benefit of readers who may have wondered what this meant, I should like to explain that our editorial director meant that too many cooks make a man early Sto bed and early to rise and have it, TOO. f Yrs. trly, f Constant Reader. himelf. Haw h*w hahw t Dear Whoofies: . How would you like to be on the Graf Zeppelin, bound on its Arctic cruise? You wouldn't? But look at the fun you'd be missing: "Ai amusing incident occurred just be- dfore the departure," says a story in: t Saturday's Times. "Professor Sam- d oilowitsch was missing when he was -wanted over the radio and was dis- -covered shaving, having overslept . himself." Haw, haw, haw, haw! .e There is nothing like a side-split- d ting incident now and then to re- x lieve the drabness of an ArctW e cruise. A u - ics YDraaul FOURTH FACULTY CONCERT Joseph Brinkman, pianist, will present the fourth of the summer series of the Faculty concerts at Hill Auditorium this evening, be- ginning promptly at 8:15. Mr. Brinkman has an enviable standing in the ranks of the young- er American pianists. In 1924, he made his debut as soloist with the Chicago Symphony orchestra with great success, and he has since had the honor of several reengagements with the same orchestra. Mr. Brink- man has concertized extensively throughout the country. His concert appearances during the past season in Ann Arbor, his first year as a member of the piano faculty, have won for him an enthusiastic local audience. His program for this evening's re- cital is as follows: 1. Sonata, Op. 10, No. 3 Beethoven We have all makes Remington, Royal, Corona, Underwood Colored duco finishes. Price $60 0. D. MORRILL ?14 South State St. Phone 6615 BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard Street Today, 11:30 to 1:30 Cold Meats with Potato Chips Cottage Cheese and Lettuce Salad or Baked Ham Sandwich with Baked Beans Sliced Tomatoes Boston Lemon Pie Orange Punch 30c 5:30 to 7:30 Individual Chicken Pies Roast Beef, Hgrseradish Pork Chops, Jelly Roast Leg of Lamb Mashed or Oven Fried Potatoes Pickled Beets, Corn 35 c MAJESTI STARTING TODAY ROMANCE THAT WILL MAKE THE WHOLE WORLD TREMBLE! LOVE SLAVE OF THE MAN SHE HATES! I I SLASHINGt PRESIDENT HOOVER put him-1 self in a favorable light again1 on Saturday when he made public a letter addressed to all the execu- tive departments in which he bluntly ordered an almost immedi- ate slash in budget figures "to elim- inate or postpone all such activi- ties as may be so treated without; serious detriment to the public wel- fare." The large deficit indicated; for the current fiscal year was given as the reason for the President's action.; One expense which could be im- mediately curtailed without detri- ment to the public welfare would be the abolition"of the R.O.T.C. and Citizen Military Training Camps, the maintenance of which costs the y:overnment several millions of dol- lars annually. Far from being paci- fiztic we believe that American youth should have the opportunity to experience military training if merely to preserve order within our own borders, but we see no neces- sity for a continuation of the type of training offered either by sum- mer camps or R.O.T.C. units in American colleges and universities. With National Guard units estab- lished in every state, totaling sever- al hundred thousands of men and headed by experienced officers, our standing army is adequately sup- plemented by reserve force suffi- cient to meet the quick demand of a sudden invasion; but the main- tenance of other military bodies seems a bit incongruous in the light of the prevalent discussion on peace and disarmament. (The New Yorker) The classics continue to be kicked around disrespectfully. The most secent instance concerns a Harvard student who is working in a Wes- -ern Union office during the sum- mer, operating a Simplex Printer Simplex Printers are machines like a typewriter which have replaced the old telegraph key. An operato in one city writes a message on one and another machine in another city transcribes it onto a piece o tape. They have to be warmed uj and tried out every morning an this is usually done in the old time honored way-the operator write over and over: "Now is the tim for all good men, etc.' One morning our Harvard young man sent, b: way of variation, the opening line of one of the odes of Horace. "Qui multa gracilis te puer in rosa," i started. It gave him a thrill to b sending this over hundreds of mile of wire. After the third line, how ever, the receiving operator brok in with: "Not receiving properly Ai your printer comes all junk." So th Latinist went back to: "Now is th time......." --. HAWAIIAN NOTE To The Editor: r f p d :s e ,s is Lt e s -. e x ,e .e anctcuLsrmamentV. When I used to write articles and The United States was the insti- music reviews for The Daily in my gator of the Kellogg Peace pact, college days I had no idea that I'd outlawing war. We can still vividly ever be writing to it from Hawaii. recall the Hoover-MacDonald con- But I had an experience Sunday versations and the resulting Lon- which I can't resist relating. don conference in which the United I got in touch with Johnny Sch- States was a dominant factor in meiler as soon as I knew he was in reducing armaments in the three- town and we and the other two party treaty, despite France's re- Michigan men had a nice visit as luctance. Next February the Geneva we rode around the Island. By the conference will assemble in an at-'way, Johnny says that was his first tempt to cut armaments of all ride with a Michigan coed. You'd types. Not only has the United better check up on that. Five Thou- States accepted the invitation to sand miles is a long way for a Mich- attend the meeting but she has igan man to come for a ride. given it a considerable amount of The boys are doing splendidly prestige by doing so and her con- and giving some real competition, duct will be closely watched and but naturally Buster Crabbe and perhaps emulated by the other Maiole and the Kahanamoku broth- countries involved. ers, who were born here and spend In view of these facts it would most of their life in the Pacific, seem the logical and economical have a little edge on them. Just thing for the government to abolish as our boys would have if these na- military training camps and look tives were competing in the Union to the army and the National Guard pool. They are being treated to a for security in times of stress, civil luau tonight, which is a Hawaiian or otherwise. It would not be a feast of poi, fish, sea-wood, all sorts wild gesture of pacificism, inas- of Hawaiian things that I can't much as most nations are in favor spell and you couldn't pronounce, of peace. Mussolini says he is and maybe some of the famous against war and certainly Stalin, "okolehao." Maybe the coach won't in Russia, is not for war. It scarce- let them break training that much, ly seems necessary to say that we though, because oke is potent. To- are sick of war. The President's morrow they sail for Japan, and I command for economy has already hope to see them on their way back doomed scores of old army posts, in August. there is talk of eliminating the use: Give them a good write-up. They, of dirigibles as part of the army deserve it. I must close now, but service, and it has been suggested I did want you to know that our that the strength of the regular boys had at least one coed cheering army be reduced. So far, however, for them over here. we have heard nothing that sug- Aloha to you and the rest of the1 gests the abolition of camps that staff. I wonder if you have as good do not fit in with the trend of the times as we used to have?1 times. Their chief value this sum-, Miriam M. Moore, '28.1 mer was to provide employment Kawailoa Training School, Waiman- and three square meals a day for lo, Oahu, T.H. July 16. 1931.1 thousands of jobless men-a worthy (Many thanks for the news, Misst enterprise without doubt, but one Moore; we shall try to check up on that could have been accomplished Johnny. We still have good times in Hoping you are the same, Cousin Smffx. * * * Dear Pltsch: (We might as well ad- mit we're writing this one to our- self, as probably any attempt at de- ception would take in no one). Pwe Pwould Plike Pto Psuggest Pthat Psomething Pbe P d o n e Pabout Pthe PDaily POfficial PBul- letin Pnotice Pconcerning Pniver- sity Women Pthat Phas Pbeen Prunning Pfor Pthree Pdays Pnow. PPltsch * * * WHAT'S RIGHT WITH THE DAILY DEPT. * * * ROLLS CAMPAIGN DEPT. We mentioned this once be- fore, but nothing came of it. The point is this: we DON'T like those machines, popular in local drug stores, for selling stamps. You've got to get two, which means that there's one left, unless you're so tremen- dously vital that you can write more than one letter at a time. We think we've worked out a solution. When you go out, just paste the extra stamp on the store window. In no time at all, providing enough of you share our feelings, the sun and its health-giving rays will be excluded, and the denizens of the place will turn to chalk at the joints. * ' * DON'T FORGET THE COMING EXCURSION TO LAKE WHOOFLE, BEHIND NATURAL S C I E N C E AUDITORIUM. WATCH FOR IT. * * * A GENTLEMAN OF PARTS (A Story of 2041shrdlu A. D.) FOREWORD I, Prof. Alexis A. Green, have lived most of my life in the twen- tieth century. I have been present at the ending of the world, and I am living in the time of its infancy, a dozen million years before an- other man will appear on this earth. One hundred and fifty cen- turies separate us from the world we know, and whether we shall be successful in sending this missive over the enormous gap, I cannot tell. In anticipation of success, I shall send it with a fragment of one of the tablets that are in our proudly rising monument, standing now, an utter anarchronism, upon a ledge of rock in a primeval jungle swamp.; * * * (PART ONE OF THIS BREATH- Presto Largo Menuetto Rondo The Sonata in D Major, composed in 1798, was the seventh of Bee- thoven's piano sonatas. Marx, the -principal commentator on the son- atas, calls it "The first great son- ata," containing as it does very ex- plicit indications of the distance Beethoven was to go in extending the piano's expressiveness. This is particularly true of the first two movements: the first movement an excellent example of Beethoven in the process of formulating his dra- matic conception of the sonata form; and the second movement one of his deepest and most mov- ing largos, surpassing any Beetho- ven slow movement previous to it and favorably comparable to some of the best ones to come. In the last two movements, Beethoven reverts to the principal inspiration of his earlier years: the grace and rather facile humour of Hayden, which he imitates not without a little dis- comfort. 2. Three Pieces Respighi Gagliarda Siciliana Passacaglia Ottorino Respighi (b 1879) was a pupil of Rimsky-Korsakof's and is now director of the Licei Musicale di Santa Cecilia at Rome and one of the foremost modern Italian composers. Respighi is one of the most versatile craftsmen in con- temporary music and there is scarcely a musical genreminwhich he has not practised. America knows him principally by his larg-1 er orchestra works, including the tone poems "The Pines of Rome" and "The Fountains of Rome," and by his opera "The Sunken Bell" which is in the repertoire of the Metropolitan. But continental crit- icism of Respighi has it that be- cause he is essentially a lyricist and a colourist, he has to call on a rather sterile type of virtuosity in his elaborate works, and is really seen at his best in his smallest works, in his songs and in his piano compositions. These three piano pieces that Mr. Brinkman is playing are three old Italian dances of the 16th and 17th centuries, originally written for lute but freely tran- scribed for the piano by Respighi. 3. Ballade in G Minor Chopin Nocturne, Op. 72, No. 1 Walse in D fiat Etude, Op. 25, No. 11 Four familiar Chopin composi- tions, the last being popularly known as the "Winter-wind" etude. 4. Sonata Brinkman Allegro Moderato Scherzetto Andantino Allegro maestoso This sonata was composed by Mr. Brinkman last year and was per- formed for the first time at his re- cital in the Mendelssohn Theatre this spring. -0- SCHUBERT: Sonata in A Major, Opus 162: played by Sergei Rach- maninoff and Fritz Kreisler: for Victor Musical Masterpiece Series Album No. 107. Schubert only wrote four sonatas for piano and violin (and three of those were sonatinas). The general critical conclusion is that Schubert never was attentive enough to a strictly pianistic style.to be able to write a piano part varied and flex- ible enough to meet the demands of ensemble. Yet Rachmaninoff's note-by-note sensitiveness in this new recording of the A Major sonata seems to deny this. The whole sonata comes through very lovely lyric music, un- usually compact and concise for Schubert. And-then, there is that very rare thing-a perfect perfor- mance. Taking all four movements Montgomery in 'The Man No matter what you have planned on the first half of the week:-If you don't include MICHIGAN In Possession' LLB' womma W- WI You'll regret it BOBBY JONES Continues His Lessons I Trilby, V e n u s of Montmarte, helpless in the spell of a pas- sion she cannot con- quer! Blindly fling- ing youth and beauty to the hypnotic fire.- that sear her soul Why? I 11 II "THE SPOON" "The Dandy and the Belle" Gay Ninety Doings THURSDAY "Never the Twain Shall Meet" America's greatest actor and his ."own beautiful star dis- covery bringing you your, supreme thrill! ALSO PICTORIAL SCREEN SONG NOVELTY Conchita Montenegro Leslie Howard SATURDAY BARBARA STANWYCK "NIGHT NURSE" m GRUEN WATCHES DIAMONDS HALLER'S JEWELERS STATE STREET AT LIBERTY Robert WATCH REPAIRING FINE JEWELRY TAKE TO en.sw l __ v«' P O R T ' "! COME TO DETROIT any day this Summer, park your car on the dock, and enjoy this all-day sail over the great International 1I ghway cf akes and Rivers. Free Dancing on the boat. Splendid Crfeteria and 1unch Service. See Detroit river front, Belle Isle, Lake St. Clair, the Flats and the celebrated "Venice of America." This cruise of 61 miles each way takes you through a con- stantly changing panorama of rare land and water views. Port Huron, Sarnia, St. Clair Flats, Algonac Starting this trip from Port Huror. passengers leave at 3:10 p. m., arriving in Detroit at 7:45 p. m. Returning, leave Detroit at 9 the next morning, ariving in Port Huron at 2:10 p. mn.. Str. Tashmoo leaves Griswold St. Dock at 9 a. m., Daily and Sunday; arrive Port Huron 2:10 p. vr Returning, leave PCRT HURON, 3:10 p. m., arrive Detroit 7:45 p. tn. FA kES: Tashmoo Park or St. Clair Flats, week days 75c; Sundays, $1.00, It. T. Port Huron or Sarnia, Ont., one way, $1.10, R.T. $2. T ASHAMOO PARK half-way between Detroit and Port Huron is Detroit's favorite pleasure park where you may spend six hours and return on Str. Tashmoo in the evening. Free dancing in the pavilion; picnic in the grove, baseball, golf and all outdoor sports and amusements. reading G. T. Ry., betwean Detroit and Port Railroad Tickets Huron, are good on Str.Tosaimooeither direction Dancing Moonlights to Sugar Island Drive to Detroit and enjoy an evening of music and dancing on Str. Tashmoo and in the pavilion at Sugar Eland. Tickets 75c. Park on the dock. Leave at 8:45 every evening. RAND LPH POPULAR STR. TASHMOO FootofGrIwod St.