_THE1MICHIGAN DAILY STAGE Ws 4 -6 AT THE CONCLUSION of part one, the Rev. Patrick Bronte says "Give me my tea black and bitter." A black and bitter portion of tea is pre- cisely the ingredient which serves to make up "Moor Born," Dan Totlberoh's impressive drama concerning the illustrious Bronte sisters. "Moor Born," which opened last night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, officially ushered in the 1935 Summer Session theater bill and to a large audience a thoroughly convincing performance was presented. The entirety of the play is but one de-_ pressing scene following another, and yet it is so successfully contrived as to keep the tension con- stantly drawn taut: As such, it makes the various characterizations extremely difficult and it is to the credit of every member of the cast that this tension was not for a moment relaxed. "Moor Born" is the tragic tale of the life of Char- lotte, Emily, and Anne, those grand Victorian spin- sters. It is the disheartening drama of their love for the only brother, Branwell, of the depravity of his life, the pitiful circumstances of his death, and the confining narrowness of Haworth, Yorkshire, upon the latent genius of the three sisters. Branwell Bronte, obviously a psychopathic case, is more distinctly an object of pity than of ridi- cule. Charles Harrell, as Branwell, is effective in the role, probably the most difficult individual por-. trayal in the entire piece. However, when Mr. Harrell attempts to emulate Branwell in a drunken stupor, it is plain that he has been in his cups very few times himself. All of the sisters handle their respective roles with credit. Mary Pray, who por- trays Anne, discharges her duties with the neces- sary sentiment and tenderness; Claribel Baird, as Charlotte, continues again this summer to present herself as the finished actress who appeared a year ago; Sarah Pierce, well known, to local audiences for several years, does a fully respectable job in the role of Emily. It is Emily who, of the three, is the most a part and parcel of the moor country to which the Brontes are attached, much as the char- acters of Hardy, half a century later, came to be- long to Egdon Heath. Miss Pierce does not fail in her efforts to make her audience feel this charac- terization.- "Moor Born," which is indeed excellent fare, sets a standard which the Repertory Players will un- doubtedly find hard to equal in their ensuing plays. -RS.R. As OthersSeeI classified Directory WANTED FOR RENT GIRL student for services in faculty LARGE corner room., Pleasant, com- home exchange. for room -rent. fortable, quiet, convenient to cam- Phone 5519. 21 pus. Reasonable. 333 E. Washing- -'- ton. 19 WANTED: Two more 'persons for - ____________ meals at the French table. 1120 SINGLE and double rooms and suites Olivia. Phone 7796. 16 for men. 825 E. University. Nea: WANTED: Two college students for School of Education. Reasonable work rerhainder of summer. Apply Dial 3851. 12 204 Michigan Theater Bldg. 8-101 - a.m. 17 FURNISHED APARTMENT with pri -- vate bath and shower. Double LOST AND FOUND rooms with hot and cold running water. Garage. Dial 8544. 422 E LOST: Black and gold earring.2,11 Washington. 13 inches long. * Heirloom. In or near Wa____gt-n. -__ Michigan Theater. Reward. Phone WELL FURNISHED SUITE and large 6352. 20 -airy front room. Reasonable. Dia 6754, 717 Arbor St. 14 ELLERBY RESIGNS POST LANSING, June 26 - (/P) - Har- ROOM RENT free to student for work old T. Ellerby, whose administration about yard and garden. Swezey as chairman of the Michigan Public 509 Thompson. 2-2340. 18 Trust commission has been under in- - vestigation, resigned today. ATTRACTIVE 2-room suite., Coin Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald, announc- fortable beds. Cross venlilatior ing he had accepted the resignation, Near campus. 327 E. William. Dia declined to make public Ellerby's let- 2-2203. $6 per week. 15 ter and said he had no further com - ment to make on it. SOCIAL DANCING Adult class every Thur. For 30 years, J. B. England has not " ve.o a pm .i vate missed a session of Sunday school at TERRACE GARDEN the First Baptist church in Roanoke, STUDIo Va. Wuerth Theater Bldg. 1; I Friday - Saturday - FRED MCMURRAY "CAR 99" plus GLORIA STUART "MAYBE IT'S LOVE" One Obstacle To Unemployment ACCORDING to Dr. Burton Morley, professor of economics at the University of Alabama, the greatest obstacle in the pathway of the college graduate as he seeks a job is his own inertia. "The better half of my graduating class - those with the better scholastic and extra-curricular rec- ords - usually have little trouble, for most of them will be employed within a period of not more than six months after graduation," Dr. Morley claims. He goes on to say that those students who are in the lower half of the scholastic records and who show no interest in activities of the student body arethe same ones who fail to find employ- ment. Such a state of affairs is easily understandable. It takes energy and ambition to spend many hours a day doing something just for the sheer joy of doing it as one must do to become successful in any extra-curricular activity. And it is the same energy and ambition that appeals to the man who interds to hire someone to help him make a suc- cess of his life work. -The Daily Blini. The Pith Helmet in "The Devil Is a Woman" Selected short Subjects ----- Saturday A Dramatic Sensation! "OIL FOR THE LAMPS OF CHINA" with PAT O'BRIEN and JEAN HUTCHINSON, Matinees 2:00 - 3:30 All Seats 25c Nights 25c and 35c "When the Briton rides the natives Because the simple creatures hope He will impale his solar topee On a tree.. ." hide in glee, Thus has Mr. Noel Coward but recently im- mortalized one of the great institutions of imperial Britain. The pith sun helmet (and only the Brit- ish genius for unbelievable nomenclature could have thought of calling it a "solar topee") has been an object of awe and romantic impulses ever since Kipling, if not before. It has probably sold even more tourist tickets to the British tropics than the cane chairs, the long drinks, the punkahs and the frangrance of oleander blossoms with which it is indissolubly associated. It has pre- served generations of strong, inarticulate and just young men from the sun which, as every one knows, never sets upon their dominions; and it is doubtful whether the producers of "Lives of a Ben- gal Lancer" could have grossed as many millions as they did were the British Army in India equipped with any less picturesque form of headgear. The pith helmet has exercised a peculiar appeal over the imagination; and at the same time has always been peculiarly British. For both reasons, one canhot read unmoved the news of its tentative introduction into the American Army. Will it dis- place the campaign hat? By comparison the cam- paign hat is an object as unlovely as it is uncom- fortable. It is airless in the sun and it blows off in the wind, and during the war was one of the reasons why our citizen soldiery yearned to get to France, where it was not used. But it, also, has a tradition behind it. It is legitimately descended from the slouch hats of the Civil War and the Stetsons beneath which the Western plains were conquered; and there is reason in the contention that even the sun in India is no hotter than the climates from which it has sheltered the American soldier and cow-hand. In some of our insular possessions, in fact, the pith helmet was until recently regarded with dis- dain as an affectation of effete Englishmen and tourists. But the helmet has been making inroads. In the Southwest (and one suspects the Holly- wood influence), an extraordinary contraption pressed out of papier-mache into the form of a pith helmet, complete with an imitation pugree, -~- on stre Grap/iic T-( h±1 r~ _IjIT~~ A. -Al__f-