THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEW STATE f Panhandle Petition Con- To rake Territory Of District Electricity Proves Itself Mightier Than Steam In Terrific Struggle Of Powerful Locomotives SECTION FITY OF Ignace Jan Paderewski in Detroit last year has led the Philharmonic-Central Concert company, to bring- him there for another piano recital ?Monday eve- ning, Jan. 14, in Arcadia auditorium. Paderewski's program is one of char-I acteritsic immensity: some Bach, the Beethoven sonata in D minor, Op. 31, the Brahms variations on a theme by Paganini, the Liszt fantasia on Moz- art's "Don Giovanni," and a Chopin group embracing the E major Noc- turne, the B flat minor Scherzo, the A flat Ballad, the C sharp minor Maz- urka and a Polonaise. HOMER Madame Louise Homer, one of the greatest contraltos of this generation, has not been heard in Detroit for sev- eral seasons and special interest is therefore being manifested in her re- cital Mondzy evening, Jan. 21, in Or- chestra hall under the auspices of the Kentucky Egg and Lump West Va. Egg and Lump Pocahontas and Coke IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HAS IOt1LLATION CO RNWELLL COAL COMMON AND FACE BRICK CORNWELL COAL uneau, Alaska, Jan. 2.-(By AP)- tehood for the southeastern part of .ska, the Panhandle, is expected 'n to be asked of congress. Mean- ile residents of that district, ex- ssing themselves in a convention -e last month, have asked congress form the territory of South Alaska. his part of Alaska embraced, when census of 1920 was taken, 21,433 Alaska's population of 57,000, liv- in 115,000 of the 590,884 square es of the northwestern corner of North American continent that mident Lincoln's secretary of state, lliam H. Seward, bought from ssia for $7,000,000. 'he proposed territory or state, for ose formation the convention pre- 'ed two memorials to congress andl med a suggested organic act, would lude all the first judicial division Alaska in its present status and )ut one-third of the third judicial ision. Thb first division is the nbandle, a strip running about enty miles wide between British lumbia and the Pacific Ocean. e third division is southwestern iska, including all the couthern st running from the nothern end the Panhandle far out to the end thh Aleutian Islands. [he promoters of separate state- >d for South Alaska were inspired, :ording to numerous formal pub- ations, by the desire to be set off m the second judicial division, vast stern and northern Alaska, with me as its best known point, and the rth division, interior Alaska, with irbanks, often called "the Chicago the north," as its metropolis. State Request 'he two memorials to congress ted the request of the Panhandle to formed into the territory of South iska and that "intimation that the :ple residing there desire that the ainage area of Prince William und and Copper River should be in- rporated with the first division" d been received. One of the mem- als set forth that "the People of utheastern Alaska would welcome clusion in the separate territory which they pray of said drainage oa of Prince William Sound and pper River and the territory east ereof or any part of it if it be de- ed of the people thereof and of con- IPULRCLEE OE HO NOT FOLOU RLE PHONES 8I-F1 and 2207 Office - Cornwell Block i t i I ix . The latest words in electric and steam railway locomotives in a test of power Electricity won a decisive victory over steam as a means of transportation in a demonstration held at Erie Pa., by the builders of the most powerful electric locomotive so far constructed. The engine was, matched with a steam locomotive of the same weight in a tug of war. Power was applied to both at exactly the same time. The electric engine slowly but surely pulled its straining, groaning opponent backward. The electric locomotive was built for the Mexican Railway. KALAMAZOO01,COLLE NEARS CENTURY MARK Kalamazoo, Jan. 2.-Nine years from next April Kalamazoo college will ob- serve the centennial of its founding, being the first institution of higher learning in Michigan to reach the 100 year mark. The school was found- ed April 22, 1833, four years before the University of Michigan held, its, first classes, and two years before Michigan became a state. Kalamazoo College is the outgrowth of the "Michigan and Huron Institute" organized by Rev. Thomas W. Merrill, a Colby college graduate who spent several years in quest of funds nec- essary before a charter could be ob- tained. The institute was merged with the. branch of the University of Michigan in 1839, but the state with- drew its support six years later. Al- though operating under a charter all of this time. it was not until 1855 that MUSIC AND MUSICIANS An almost unprecedented avalance of musical events is promised Detroit during January, according to an- nouncements which indicate that the 1923-1924 season, unrivalled in the number and importance of its con- certs, is about to reach its climax. With recitals by Heifetz, Gabrilo- witsch, Paderewski, Homer, Chaliapin and Farrar approaching and two pairs' of concerts by the Detroit Symphony orchestra under Mr. Gabrilowitsch, pa- trons of music are promised an enor- mous variety of entertainment. IEIFETZ garded as one of the first living mast- ers of his instrument, has recently re- turned from a tour of the world which was everywhere a sensational suq- cess. His Detroit program includes the Bach Chaconne, the beautiful Grieg sonata, the Wieniawski Scherzo and Tarantelle and several smaller pieces. GABRILOWITSCII One of the most interesting events of the season is always the piano recital, of Ossip Gabrilowitsch, the conductor of the Detroit Symphony orchestra. Mr. Gabrilowitsch's concert this year will occur at 8:15 o'clock next Mon- day evening in Orchestra hall. He will play the Bach Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue, the first Beethoven sonata, in F minor, Op. 2, a Brahms Rhap- sody and Intermezzo, a Chopin group composed of the G minor Ballade, the I t i i Vlichigan Concert bureau. Mme. Homer '1'11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111ilIIIIIIII s now leading contralto of the Chica- - go Opera company and, although she TODAY has been before the public for nearly t OA 25 years, her voice is pronounced un- TIIIS umpaired and her art more perfect than ever, . A ROARINGCYCLONE OF FUN CHALIAPIN. -. ..p.... . Feodor Chaliapin, the great Russian basso who will sing in Ann Arbor, Fri- - lay, Jan. 25, will appear the following r Monday, Jan. 28, in Arcadia auditor- lum, Detroit, the last number on the - Philharmonic-Central Concert course. His program cannot be announced because of his custom of announcing > the numbers from the platform as he sing-s DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The seventh pair of subscription - concerts of the Detroit Symphony or- chestra, Thursday and Friday, Jan. 10 and 11, will be distinguished by the appearance as soloist of Mischa El- man, the eminent Russian violinist. t® Mr. Elman will play the Vivaldi con e certo in G minor and Edouard Lalo's Symhponie Espagnole. Mr. Gabrilo- witsch will lead the orchestra in the symphonic poem, "Le Rouct d'Om I phale" of Saint-Saens and Glazounoff -e tye uccess Fourth Symphony. W Lr'am C ,A novelty will be introduced into - the eighth pair of concerts, Jan. 2: and 25, when Madame Wanda Landow- - ska appears as harpsichord soloist.. . ... .... The program will be entirely of early my the iirector music, Handel, Mozart and Bach, and ms" ist(d ,iith D. W. Griffihl in the making of SHOWS Mme. Lanodwska is famous as one of "W:ay Ivn last.", "The Birth of a Nation" 2:00-3:30 the foremost living interpreters of this and mnany others.,j 7:0O-S:3 l music which is also Mr. Gabrilo- witsch's forte. -ADDED 'EA TURES q "BLACK AND BLUE" Manila, Jan. 2.-An earthquake at 2 "=LACK ANDChristie Comedy .Orchestra o'clock this morning shook the build I- I' hiteCmd r sr ings of Manila and aroused the people SUNDAY SOON from their sleep. No damage was re- CH ASITY (1C) RICHARD ported. featuring BARTHELMESS 1katherine MacDonald in "Twenty-One" It's tru3 efficiency to use Daili - F. -" 7 '; _.:;K' 3,. p ;: t : ::e . ';rY: ", =, . =. ' . i : t ' 9. ,'3 . ": i'ar. i: w a' : .,: Jascba, Heifetz, time brilliant youngC sharp minor Polonnaise and Mazurka Russian violinist, appears in recital at ;and the E major Nocturne, and short 8:15 o'clock tonight in Arcadia audi- pieces by Glazounoff and Percy Grain- torium, the fourth attraction of the 'ger. Philharmonic-Central concert cour eA under the management of James E PAIEREWSKI Devoe. Heifetz who is universally re- The magnificent reception accorded, ?alo Alto, Calif., Jan. 2.-(By A. -Only 60 co-ed-s ac Leland Stan- d university are "stellar steppers," ile the remaining 440 have to be itent with but scattering attentions nn the 2,200 men in the institution, cording to the Daily Palo Alto, a dent publication. A "stellar stepper" is, in college ilance, a very popular girl. A recent letter to the paper signed atty Gray" offered an explanation the position of the 440, and ex- assed to the men students curiosity! to the cause of the situation. 'i wanted to know why Stanford mn rushed 60 out of 500 women," d tie communication. "You said at if I signed a promise never to. eak dates or substitute other girlsl neglect my old friends, why, you'd e me a rush like some of the 'stellar ppers' receive. It's -too funny. All of these 'stellar ppers' break dates at the eleventh ur and fifty-ninth second. It is ey alone who can afford to sub- tute one from the 440 when a more lectable date is preferred. And only e star performers forget old friends. id it's queer as it's true that these me snubbed friends grow more per- ;tent. One wants g what one can't ve, you know. "The qualifications you hold up as sirable are the very ones the non- ppers possess. You men like to be the college was granted a charter con- !l~6IIII liHIIIIlIIIHIIIIIIIiIIIIhI6li6IIl111i1060IB6lIIIII6liIIIIl i#!l sidered of a liberal nature, enabling the college to confer degrees. Women were granted equal privil- eges with men in the 1855 charter, 1 III1llhI1 and it is claimed that Kalamazoo College was one of the first co-edu- cational institutions in America., Housing of the college in its own buildings was begun in 1836' in tear-r porary structures on land given the school by Kalamazoo ;citizens who also came forward with monetary assistance. The land on which the first buildings were erected was sold and the men's dormitory was built = AE1ThAE in 1857 and other structures addedN from time to time. SECOND H AND Rome, Jan. 2.-In an endeavor to develop direct wireless communica- tion with New York a structure about 600 feet high has been built at St. Paolo, near Rome, and another aboutI- 1,000 feet hig hat Coltano. GARR Ic Mat,--at.-a"*2:00- Tonight at..8:00 JULIA Sothern Marlowl- ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN T.ONIGHT 46 9 II iiI1I1III 111111 11'111111111111111li iili 111 8 Sharp "A1IMI ll Friday........"TWELFTH ,IGIIT" -= Saturday Mat. "ROMEO AD JULIET" Sat. Eve. "TAMlNG OF T ME SHRfW" - j Prices: $1.00 to $,.00 (plus tax) M Il11l 11111H H 111111 1111111111111 11 I6BH111111 611111111111111 I I m Classilileds.-Adv. 3 I // / il/ ZEE,, / ./f %r f /' // %r i / /fir/ % ~ % ',' %,, % f ,, -,,,. , ri fig.,,~_,. i //i , ADBIG /_ ' ' ILL TRIN UNIVERSITY AMEN AT ARMY CAMP tud nts of aeronautical engineer Swho are ,enlisted in one of the iversity i. 0. T. C. units will have oppcrtunity of attending one ad- need grouip camp of the Army Air :ice. This announeement, made the War department, permits the ronautical student to attend the rap without having first attended M p of his particular unit of the M. '1.C. Due to an act on . Congress which rporarily stopped the establishment Air service units in university R. T. C. posts, the university R. 0. T. has been unable to establish such unit here. Following an appli tion by Major Carpenter, the War 4% r. .,,: 'A PEN, tose four years This is a great pen for college men and women! 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