THE SUMMER. MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1931. THE SUM1WI~R MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1931. / V Published every morning except Monday lng the University Summer Session by the rd in Control of Student Publications. 'he Associated Press is exclusively entitled the use for republication ofall news dia- cles credited to it or not otherwise credited this paper and the local news published ein. AUlrights of republication of special atches herein are also reserved. ntered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, post- ce as second class matter. ubscription by carrier, $1.50; by mail, 75. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, n Arbor, Michigan. relephones: Editorial, 4925; Business ,214. EDITORIAL STAFF MANAGING EDITOR HAROLD O. WARREN, JR. itorial Director........... Gurney Williams y Editor..r...........Powers Moulton ws Editor . ...........Denton Kunze sic, Drama, Books .... William J. Gorman men's Editor........... Eleanor Rairdon >rts Editor.............0. H. Beukema egraph Editor............. L. R. Chubb Night Editors sometimes ruthless but undoubted- ly necessary. And so, to those old students who have returned to the University this summer, and to those who are establishing residence here for the first time, The Daily wishes to ex- tend a hearty welcome, untinged by apology for the existence of the Modern Touch. Enjoy today's ad- vantages today; for tomorrow they may be obsolete. Editorial --o Comment I Kunze n Bunting len R. Carrir W. Carpente gar Eckert bara Hall rar Hornik ian Manchem Powers Moulton Gurney Williams Assistants Alfred Newman Mi Jack Pickering er Sher M. Quraishi Edgar Racine Theodore Rose Brackley Shaw ater P. Cutler Showers BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM R. WORBOYS Assistant Business Manager .. Vernon Bishop Circulationd&rAccounts Manager .. Ann Verner Contracts Manager............. Carl Marty Advertising Manager.s...Erle Kightlinger Assistants Corbett Franklin Ralph Hardy Don Lyon TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1931. Night Editor-GURNEY WILLIAMS Keeping Pace Varying from its usual custom of pointing out to summer students the specific cultural and recreation- al advantages to be found in Ann Arbor, The Daily this year wishes merely to extend to all Summer Session 'students-and especially to members of the teaching profes- sion-a warm welcome, aided and abetted by the weather. Students attracted to the Univer- sity by its cultural advantages quickly acquaint themselves with the obvious recreational facilities; hence their enumeration at this time would be superfluous. What The Daily does wish to point out Is that the expanding campus is keeping pace with the rapid spirit of the times and is consequently exhibiting to old students a chang- ing plan--conceived, approved, and adopted after due and careful con- sideration of modern educational conditions. Each year the University regis- tration totals reach new high lev- els, each year new educational fa- cilities must be provided for the increased number of students; and because of this the campus under- goes a gradual evolution that is not obvious to those who stand by and watch it, but which is striking to former graduates. Last week many an old grad, drawn back to the scene of his col- lege career, was shocked by the greatly altered appearance of his alma mater's campus. This is nat- ural from the standpoint of sen- timentality, but the change that shocked them is quite as natural from the standpoint of progress. What many old grads did not seem to realize is that their old school is growing, and growth means phy- sical expansion. This should be a source of pride to those who have remained loyal to the University through the years and should still the disappointed cluckings of those who return and search vainly for the old buildings and old haunts that served them so well but which are no longer adequate. To stand still is to stagnate. Standing sill would gratify the sentimentality of many old grads, but the resulting stagnation would be too big a price to pay. Criticisms aimed at constant improvement and increasing service must be ig- nored if Michigan is to keep abreast of the times. Despite these changes, and argu- ments to the contrary, Michigan spirit remains much the same. The lapsing of traditions occurs only when those traditions become more and more ridiculous or impractical in the modern scheme of educa- Uion; the old grad's cry of "The old time spirit has gone to the dogs!"r won't hold water when it is thor- oughly analyzed. The essential ele- mnents are there and will remain as long as University life retains its basic characteristics.r Today's student enjoys many things that old grads never heard9 Of -and he leaves college more thoroughly equipped to cope with{ nodern conditions, simply because1 the system has been stepped up1 o dovetail with today's problems. or this he must thank the much C) ------ (The Michigan Journalist) Fault could easily be found with almost any of the contemporary schools of psychology for neglect- ing to study one of the most curi- ous and inveigling of mental phe- nomena-unnamed and strangely taken for granted in this day of the psycho-analyst. For purposes of discussion, we may here refer to it as the Alumni Complex. Its symptoms, at times intricate, almost inscrutable, are none the less familiar even to the layman unversed in the mysteries of psy- chological terminology. They take a peculiar form of expression eas- ily discussed under the headings of style and form. Style: Feverish wails, frequently in a derogatory tone, adressed to "Alma Mater;" often complicated by delusions of former grandeur, loss of which is attributed to an- other group of persons to whom the patient refers technically as the "Younger Generation." Mere men- tion of this group causes voluble sneers directed at a diminishing virility. At times, during periods of extreme hallucination, the pa- tient directs invective toward a person called "Coach." Form: Patient's mode of expres- sion frequently takes the form of an open letter. This he invariably signs "Old Grad"-an epithet com- monly followed by an apostrophe and two digits. Of these latter the patient is particularly proud, and imagines that in some occult man- ner they render him oracular. Pa- tient shows distinct fondness for turgid rhetoric, interspersed with frequent references to the "ol' fight," "school spirit," and other confusing phrases. Tone of letter alternates between anger, sorrow, and despair. Patient often gathers with oth- ers of his ilk. These organizations are termed "Alumni Associations." Despite ordinary laws of expecta- tion, patients, when organized, are relatively harmless as long as they are expending energy in eating in- digestible foods at luncheons. Food renders patient sentimental; anes- thetizes his critical faculties; whets his memory, leading him to recall techniques applied as an under- graduate to provide amusement. These he once called "pranks" but now refers to them as "rackets;" following the recitation of each he repeats a favorite formula, "Those were the days." Despite his eccentricities, the pa- tient is highly prized by an Alma Mater that often takes pains to render him malleable through food and association; for he is valuable, able to render existent the thing dearest to the hearts of Boards of Trustees-a bequest. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be briet, confining themselves to less that. 300 words if possible. Anonymous com munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, howver, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial minion of The Daily. OASTED ROLL HERE , WE ARE AGAIN For the benefit of all the new- comers in these parts, it might be just as well for us to do a little introducing of people and places that all you strange, new people from Dubuque and Columbia and Lapland are going to meet in your next pleasant eight weeks on this campus. And then again it might be just as well if we did not. For you'll find out soon enough just what a dull column this one you are now reading usually is, how stupid the editorials on our left will be, just how idiosyncroni- ous the reviewer on our right can be at times, how little real news you'll pick up on the front page of this rag, and how few of the notices on the back page will ever really concern you. We learned all that long ago when we first came to this town, when State street was still just a little dirt track in a meadow and when there was a big mud hole right in front of what now is known as the M Hut. Of course State street still is a little dirty, and the mud hole is behind the Hut in the alley now-right under the Press Building windows, but you won't come in contact with that mud hole much except through this column and the Pub- lic-Opinion-Letters-to-the - Editor Column; so we won't go into that further for the present. However, there are a few things you might learn about the place right off at the start. To begin with there is the new hedge that has been put in in front of Angell hall next to the side-walk. You may have noticed it already. It was put in, so we are told, about three months ago by the Buildings and Grounds department before there was any rumor about cut- ting down the University's appro- priations. They did it to keep the town children from playing foot- ball on the lawns and the town dogs from-well, from playing on the lawn, too. The motives were pure, all right, but the results were mixd. As witness what we have at present. You see, it was that $45,- 000 cut in the budget. It came along, and now the University can't afford to water the hedge; so it isn't doing as well as it might. There is a movement on foot, how- ever, sponsored by the Alternate Tuesday Afternoons Reading Sec- tion of the Faculty Women's Club, to buy some spanish moss and hang it on the hedge until the hedge either learns to grow without wat- er or it is dug up to permit ex- cavations for a new Law Library. , , ,* Those of our readers who were with us last summer will undoubt- edly recall the somewhat heated controversy that raged at one time over the dress which gentlemen ef- fected when in attendance upon the Tuesday night musicales in Hill Auditorium. There was not a little stir over what was termed- rather crudely, too-"sloppiness" in masculine taste. We want to pre- vent all that nasty mess from crop- ping up to spoil this summer ses- sion, which, we are assured by Dean Kraus, will be the Thirty- eighth Annual Summer Session of the University of Michigan, and so we are going to publish some fash- ion hints from time to time. Right now the only picture we can find has really little connection with the men (we hope)--at least, the thin ones-but in absence of a better one, we will print it. What the women WILL wear. Our out of town correspondent sends us the following clipping from the New York Times. BOSTON, June 24. (P)-Nicholas J. Tiffany of Chesterfield, Mo., a Harvard senior, who was seriously injured in a plunge into an empty swimming pool,.was reported slight- ly improved today. Anyway, that's the first we had heard that the Wellesley wenches were taking over even masculine names, too. Music & Drama GHOSTS A Review In the opinion of this reviewer, it takes a greater Mrs. Alving than Doris Rich was able to give last Thursday night to make Ibsen's "Ghosts" a very well integrated tragedy. Except for the sure-fire moments of horror in the last act, the local production seemed very sadly dull, very haphazardly con- ceived. Surprisingly enough, the play has weathered the years very poorly. Pastor Manders proved an insuf- ferably colorless character to whom quite too much time on the stage was granted. IL3s weakness, his amiable stupidity, and his gullibil- ity could all be grasped in the first few minutes; after those he was entirely tiresome. The character was not much helped either by Ainsworth Arnold's shiftless, ill- varied acting. On the other hand, Engstrand was performed quite amazingly well by Reynolds Evans; yet even this character, having very little to do with the play anyway, was again tiresome, his hypocrisy being very stagey and as it seemed purposely distended by Ibsen to make the pastor's gullibility the more obvious. The two or three long scenes between these two at the most evoked a few half-heart- ed laughs. But more important, the scenes between the Pastor and Mrs. Alv- ing were all very dull. This was not quite so necessary, though it is understandable. "Ghosts" repre- sents perhaps the play in which Ibsen employed the "retrospective" technique most completely. The tragic protagonist is Mrs. Alving; yet all the very crucial and reveal- ing moments in her tragedy lie in the past. Thus it takes a very com- manding, extremely evocaitve actor to give Mrs. Alving full tragic mag- nitude. That is, the actor must make such terribly prosaic mo- ments as those during which the Pastor and Mrs. Alving discuss fire insurance very significant not only of some things about the Pastor (which was all the present produc- tion gave) but about Mrs. Alving (her tact, her sensitiveness, her kindly understanding for example). Miss Rich, for some reason or other did nothing to raise the level of scenes like these. Consequently they remained dull. Miss Rich 'seemed not to have grasped the fact that all the difficulties of Ib- sen's much heralded retrospective technique rest with actress and de- mand a more inclusive type of act- ing effort than she put forth. Mere mediocrity can be best grasped per- haps khen one tries to imagine what Miss Yurka could be in the part. WHAT'S GOING ON JUNE 30-JULY 6 TUESDAY 4:00 p. m.-Assembly of students and faculty of the School of Edu- cation, University High school aud- itorium. 5:00 p. m.-"Our Infinite Uni- verse," illustrated lecture, Prof. H. D. Curtis, Natural Science audi- torium. Theatres Majestic-"Fifty Million French- men." Michigan - "Laughing Sinners" with Joan Crawford. Wuerth-"The Vice Squad" with Paul Lucas and Kay Francis. WEDNESDAY 5:00 p. m.-"The Levels of Hu- man and Animal Learning," illus- trated lecture, Prof. Adelbert Ford, Natural Science auditorium. ONE SUMMER DAY Affords ample time for a delightful 120-mile round trp cruise on Detroit river and Lake Erie from Detroit to PUT-IN-BAY ISLAND PARK Scene of the Battle of Lake Erie. Golf, bathing, boating, fishing, picnic in the grove or dine at the fine hotels. Perry Victory monument and wonderful caves. 7 5c FR THE ROUD TRIP.1 c CLD 40C WEEKDAYS .25 and Return same day Str. Put-In-Bay leaves foot of First St., Detroit, daily, 9 a.m. Home at 8 p.m., except Fri.,10:15 p.m.,for Put-In-Bay, Cedar Point and Sandusky,O. $ 7A BARGAIN TWO-DAY OUTING $7 The Crescent Hotel Company and Ashley & Dustin SteamerLine have joined to offer the extremely low rate of $7fora two-day outing atPut-In-Bay.Leave Detroit any day at 9a.m., arrive12noon.Lunch at Crescent Hotel, also evening dinner and room; breakfast and dinner the next day. Round trip on steamer and dinner on the boat returning. CEDAR POIINT The Lido of America. Special excursions every Friday with over three hours at the Point, $1.50 round trip; other days one hour stopover, fare $1.75 round trip, Cedar Point or Sandusky. Return same day. DANCING MOONLIGHTS Leave Detroit :45 p.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 60c. Home 11:30 p.m. Saturday, Sunday, 75c. Finzel's Snappy Band. ASHLEY & DUSTIN STEAMER LINE Foot of First Street Detroit, Michigan TAKE A RIDE:ON STR. TASHMOO0' .-. ~ j ~. 111DY;;,;; ^'T: ;;i iii _ igmagq 1 f P . .- . TO -HURON 0 .. COME TO DETROIT any day this Summer, park your car on the dock, and enjoy this all-day sail over the great International Highway of Lakes and Rivers. Free Dancing on the boat. Splendid Cafeteria and Lunch 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 Huron passengers leave at 3:10 p. m., arriving in Detroit at 7:45 p. m. Returning, leave Detroit at 9 the next morning, arriving in Port Huron at 2:10 p. m. Str. Tashmoo leaves Griswold St. Dock at 9 a. m., Daily and Sunday; arrive Port Huron 2:10 p. m. Returning, leave PORT HURON, 3:10 p. m., arrive Detroit 7:45 p. m. FARES: Tashmoo Park or St. Clair Flats, week days 75c; Sundays, $1.00, R. T. Port Huron or Sarnia, Ont., one way, $1.10, R.T. $2. TASHMOO 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., between Detroit and Port Railroad Tickets Huron, are good on Str. Tashmoo either 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 Island. Tickets 75c. Park on the dock. Leave at 8:45 every evening. RANDOLPH POPULAR STR TASHMOO '**TRO**Iwld'. 953f * DETROIT, MICH. .' To the Editor: I would very much like to know why there is not greater coopera- tion between the Michigan Daily and the Department of Journalism. It seems to me that the Daily could provide a most desirable training for journalism students. Like all professional students, students of Journalism require training under expert guidance. This training is provided in the medical school by a year of interne- ship, something similar is needed for the department of journalism. Perhaps it is even more badly needed for in most cases doctors deal with the physical bodies of people whereas the journalist makes daily impression on the minds of newspaper readers. Jour- nalism, too, deals with the major- ity of citizens both of healthy and unhealthy minds. So it seems to me that it needs to be even more socially creative and professional in character. With the help of the Department of journalism such an ideal could be well worked for and the Michi- gan Daily could be a good training ground for journalism students. Yours very truly, A Jorniu indnt Lydia Bound" ers. Theatres Mendelssohn - "Paris with the Repertory play- Majestic-"Tarnished Lady" with Clive Brook and Talulah Bank- head. Michigan-"Laughing Sinners." Wuerth-"The Vice Squad." THURSDAY 2:30 p. m.-Tour of Ann Arbor and vicinity. Students meet on Li- bary steps. 5:00 p. m.--"Geology of Niagara Falls and Vicinity," illustrated lec- ture, Prof. William H. Hobbs, Nat- ural Science auditorium. Theatres Lydia Mendelssohn - ' Bound." Majestic-"Tarnished Lady Michigan-"Mel Fall in with Adolphe Menjou. Wuerth-"The Sin Ship" Louis Wolheim. FRIDAY "Paris r." Love," with I Theatres Lydia Mendelssohn -" Paris