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February 17, 1924 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1924-02-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Si

APPLICATIONS TO
DITIBTDSOON;

Plays Tomorrow

Application for tickets to the Soph-
nore Prom, which will be held March
in the ball room of the Union, are
be given out this week in the lob-
r of the Union according to William
oleman, '26E, general chairman of
fe committee in charge of arrange-
ents. The price of the tickets is fix-
I at $550.
In connection with giving out appli-
ations, a class dues day will be held
hen arrangements will be made 'forI
l members of the sophomore liter-
ry and engineering classes to make
heir payments to the class treasurers.
h traesurer will be stationed in the
>bby of the Union, and in order to
btain tickets to the prom it will be
ssential that all dues be paid.
Ilumnae Plan Fundt
Campaign At Meet
Repre'sentatives TJom, xteen or-
anized units of alumnae attended the
ild-winter meeting of the Alumnae,
ouncil of the University, which was l
eld yesterday afternoon at the Un-
>n. Each delegate gave a detailed
eport concerning the manner in which
er group has made money for the
uilding fund, the amount secured, the
umber of life memberships within the
nit and a statement showing how
early ready the group is prepared to
egin an intensive drive.
A new campaign organization was.
ormed which will be known as the
ational campaign committee and it
ras voted that an amount of $12,000 be
ilaced at the disposal of this commit-
ee, which can be called upon as work-
ng capital. This is to be in the form
f a loan which will be repaid to the
Building association.
President Marion L. Burton and.
Dean Jean Hamilton were formally
onfirmed as honorary and active
hairmen of the organization and Dean
Familton gave an outline of the plans
or the coming drive.
Further announcements concerning
he campaign will be given at the al-
umnae luncheon which will take place
in Detroit, March 1.
Relief Committee to meet
Members of the committee appoint-
ed by the Student council to devise a
plan whereby Michigan can join the
aational movement for the relief of
European students and professors will
meet together for luncheon at noon to-
morrdw in room 319 of the Union.

The new policy would provide for
a French mandate over the industrial
area of Germany, to be recognized by
the allied powers.
Prime Minister Macdonald is con-
sidering the plan of calling an inter-
national conference for the limitation
of aerial armament.
If the allied reparations commission
approves, a plan will be instituted in
Germany whereby 1,000,000,000 paper
marks may be exchanged for a gold
one.
The League of Nations is holding a
naval disarmament conference in
Rome. About 30 nations, many of
whom have no navy and a number of
whom have only one gun-boat, will
take part.

Choose Cast For '26; Anna Valeska, Elizabeth Pike.
24; Pengard, Charles Livingstone,
Comedy Club Play 25; Mrs. Pengard, Rhea Schlaak, '24;o
Borolsky, Edward Parn~all, '241; Jonny
Jason, Lester O. Palmitter, '24; De--
Comedy Club has selected the fan- net, W. N. Spanagel, '2E; Maid,t
tastic melodrama, "Captain Apple- Louis Barley, '25.
jack" for its annual production and The play will be placed in rehearsal
has selected a cast for it. The play immediately, and two pre roiances
includes all the tried ingredients of will be offered on April 2 and 4. in
a popular thriller, with just enough the Whitney Theatre. A meeting of
effective satire to raise it above the the cast will be held at four o'clock
ordinary. itomorrow in Newberry hall.
The following cast has been select- 1
ed: Ambrose Applejohn, Jack Has- i Members of the Army and Navy club]
seberg; Lush, Donald Snyder, '25; have initiated a membership campaign
Poppy Faire, Phyllis Turnbull, '26; which will be conducted ent rely by
Mrs. Whitcombe, Margaret Effinger, personal solicitation.

Pro.i Badger Back front Pittsburg
Prof. W. L. Badger, of the chemical
engineering department, returned Fri-1
day from Pittsburg, Pa., where he

f

deliveredi the second of a public lee-!
ture series at Carnegie Tech. His
subject was "Evaporation."
Patronize The Daily Advertisers.
AI)RIAN-AN ARBOR BUS LiNE
Central Time (Slow Time),
Leave Chamber of Commerce
Week Days Sundays
6:45 a. m. 6:45 a. m.
12:45 p.m. 6:45 p. m.
JAS. H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor
Phone 926-M Adrian, Mich. 1

FEBRUARY
S 11 T W T F S
1'. 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 s 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 20 27 28 29

A,

FACTORY HAT STORE
Packard St. Phone 1702

617

(Where D. U. It. Stops at State)

It's true efficiency
Classifieds.-Adv.

to use

STARTING

/
As a result of the marriage alli-
ances which Queen MarieofrRoumania
- is negotiating between her children
Jousef U evinne and Balkan princes, the Little Enten-
Josef Lhevinne distinguished pianist te, organizeq by France as insurance
sMie. Levinneillgupshearpintseagainst Germany, faces disruption.
and Mmne. Lhevinne will appear in the
final offering of the Extra Concert ser- Zinoviev of the Soviet said: "We
les in solo and two-piano numbers. shall give industrial concessions here
The concert will be held at 8 o'clock and there, but we shall not deliver
tomorrow night in Hill auditorium. the country of the Soviets to the in-

TODAY

Age
Arm

Shows Today at
2-3:40-5:20

Come .early

7-8:45

The Week's News
In Brief
(Continued from Page One)
surgents in Congress has so encour-
aged the progressive element in thisl
country that, through the medium of
the counsel for progressive political
action, a third party is probable in the
coming election.

ternational wolves."

A bill has been proposed in New
Jersey which would effectually bar
the teaching of all history which'
doesn't cast a rosy gleam on the Stat-
ue of Liberty. Princeton professors
point out that this would ban writings1
of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln,
Roosevelt; files of newspapers and di-
aries; and most of our present history
textbooks.
Ambassador Wiedfeldt, from Ger-,
many, has tendered his resignation.
following the embassy's failure to put
their flag at half mast when Wilson
died. He said he had orders not to
from the German government.
A "sucker list" of more than 29,-
000 names has been revealed in the
investigation of the Uncle Sam Oil
company, which advertised a capital-
ization of $800,000,000.

A revolution is getting into its stride
in Honduras. Both sides say they
have won. The Honduras Govern-
ment band joined the revolutionists;.
taking their instruments with them.
The Obregon armies inflicted sev-
eral decisive defeats during the last
week. It is the beginning of the end.
President Obregon said that this
would be the last military rebellion
in. Mexico.
Due to repeated displays of dis-
courtesy and hostility by the Egypt-
ian government, Howard Carter, di-
rector of the Tutankhamen operations,
has closed the tomb.
Boak to Speak on Roman Life
Prof. A. E. Boak of the history de-
partment will give an illustrated lec-
ture on "Municipal Life in the Rom-
an Empire" at 8 o'clock Tuesday night
in room D, Alumni Memorial hall.
This is the third of a series of lec-
tures on various aspects of Italian
history and art which is being con-
ducted under the auspices of the ro-
mance languages department. The
lecture is open to the public.
Daily classified for real results.

I

MAIZE

and
HOLBROOK LINN

Y

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............

At

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in
7 72ppni.h J.omance

Vienna, Feb. 16-(By A.P.)-Ratifi-
cation of the Washington eight hour
day convention was voted down by the
government party invcommittee of the
national assembly today but the arti-
cles concerning the unemployment in
night work of women and children and
the rights of farm labor were accept-
ed.
A picture is being filmed of Theo-
dore Roosevelt by the United Produc-
ers and Distributors film company
which will be ready for release in the
early spring. The picture will por-
tray the former president as jungle
explorer, rough rider, and politician.
New York, Feb. 16.-Henry Bacon,
designer of the Lincoln memorial in
Washington, died early today at the
Postgraduate hospital.j
raily classified for real results.I

Relations between Honduras and the
United States have come to an end
because the three political factions in
that turbulent little republic can't
agree without bloodshed.
FOREIGN
A French deputy, M. Tardieu, de-
clared that the only concrete result
of the new greatly increased French
taxes would be a large increase in the
strength of the Communist party.
However, Poincare goes right ahead
with his taxation plans.
French royalists have veered off on
a new tack. They now encourage ev-
ery move of the Socialists, Commun-
ists, and other extremists. They hope
thus to disgust the conservative ele-
ment and prepare the country for an-
other coup d'etat.
The continued unproductivity of the
Ruhr, says a correspondent, is slow-
ly causing France to change her oc-
cupation policy.

Willit's
Every Day Except Sunday
11:09 to 2 and 5 to 7 P. M.

AN ERNST LUBITSCH PRODUCTION

I

-ADDED fEATURE--
MACK SENNETT PRESENTS
HARRY LNDN
AND THE 1924 JATING GIRLS
IN

40c
CLUB LUNCH
Choice of
Meat or Eggs
Potatoes One Side
Bread and Butter
Tea, Coffee or Milk

Dish

I

"PICKING PEi
"FUN FROM THE PRESS"
SELECTIONS FROM "CARMEN"

60c
11:30-2 DINNER

S to 7

dWI - 22 d.

Soup
Wafers
Meat or Eggs
Potatoes One Vegetable
Bread and Butter
Pie or Ice Cream
Tea, Coffee or Milk
$1.00,

Wuerth Concert Orchestra
N. D. FALCO E, Director
Special Music Score

J

A Warming Drink
i for Winter Sports
The tingling exhilaration that
comes with winter sports brings
also a b.een thirst. As a cold-
weather stimulant A-B Ginger Ale
is a happy substitute for coffee --
the naturalwarmth of pure Jamaica
Ginger prevents any chance of
chill.

11:30-2

5 to 7

NCHES" f
-PATHE NEWS
-
1 - -
- a f
4 z-

SPECIAL DINNER
soup
Wafers Olives
Steak or Chicken
French Fried Potatoes
Salad
Bread and Butter
Pie or Ice Cream
Tea, Coffee or Milk
Short Orders and Banquets
Our Specialty
Special Sunday
Dinner

1,3

12 to 2 P. 1.

Price $1.00

-I .'

Wihits the Caterer
Phone 173 315 S. State St.
.I. . . . . .

I

i
t J

DETROIT UNITED UNES.
EAST BOUND
Limiteds: 6 a. m., 9:10 a. m. and
every two hours to 9:10 p. m.
Express: 7 a. m., 8 a. m. and every
two hours to 8 p. ,.

LL G ,. I

!;1

I,

TODAY TJRU TUESDAY
BETTY BLYTHE

1I

I1

IN

t c -' lA T:TN1,*T C.Al'TH111RR 1 11

b 414 -1

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