R_ THE MICHIIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1924 I i Published every morning except Monday d uring the uiversity year by the Board in Control of Student Pubications. Members of Western Conference Editorial * Association. # The Asscated Press is exclusively en- tit ito the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in. this paper and the local news pub liqhed therein. Entered, at the postoffce at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postae granted by Third Assistant, Post- Subscription by carrier, $3.0; by mail, x 4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; busi- ness, 960. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor...............John G. Garlinghouse News.Editor............Robert G. Ramsay Night Editors George W. Davis Joseph Kruger Thomas ' . Henry John Conrad Kenneth C. Keller Norman R. Thal Sports Editor ........William H. Stoneman Sunday Editor.........Robert S. Mansfield Women's Editor.......... ..rena Moran Music and Drama. Robert B. ;Henderson Telegraph Editor.....William J. Walthout Assistants Louise Barley Winfield H. Line Marion Barlow Harold A. Moore Leslie S. Bennets Carl E. Ohlmacher Norma Bicknell William C. Patterson )'erman Boxer Helen S. Ramsay Smith Cady Jr. Regina Reichmann Willard B. Crosby Marie Reed Valentine L. Davies Edmarie Schrauder ames W. Fernamberg Frederick 14. Shillito oseph . Gartner Fredk. K. Sarrow, Jr. anning. Houseworth C. Athur Stevens Elizabeth S. Kennedy Marjory Sweet Elizabeth Liebermann Frederic Telmos 1-rancis R. Line Herman J. Wise BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 980 BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROXSSER Advertising...................E. L. Dunne ,xuvei-tsing...................... 3., Fnn Advertising..............Ii. A. Marks Advertising......H. M Rockwell Accounts....................Byron Parker Circulation..................R. C. Winter Publication................John W. Conlin Assistant . P.W. Arnold W. L. Mullins W. F. Ardussi K. F. Mast CoronzBurris H. L. Newmann F. Dentz 'Thomas Olmstead Philip I~eits 3. D. Ryan David Fox NT. Rosnzweig Norman Freehling Margai'et Sandburg W. E. Hamaker F. t. Schoen.eld V. Johnson S. H. Sinclair L. LI. Kramer F. Taylo Louis W. Kramer WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1924 Night Edtior-KENNETH C. KELLAR LET'S WIELD THE BIG STICK In these days when thousands of students throng to stadia and cheetx themselves hoarse in the support of a team which is representing their school, there is hardly a murmur con-. corning another contest which sur- passes far, in importance, the weekly games. At every point on the campus is heard comment on football, yet the other issue at hand is scarcely touched upon. Football games are all right; they fulfill 'a distinct function in life and as such are rightly sup- ported, but how about the national campaign for president? That is not a matter of a season. It is .a contest which affects every student on the campus and the future prosperity o the nation. Michigan is, of course, handicapped by the fact that it is a state institu- tion. Hence, its official agencies can take no stand in partisan politics. Impartiality is all right, but it does not arouse interest. It is nevertheless inevitable as far as these agencies are concerned. Neither, the administration, The Daily, nor the .faculty can take any steps which will lead to candi- dates speaking in Ann Arbor or to a discussion of the issues of the cam- paign by representative authorities. The Daily early in the year ran a series of three editorials giving an unbiased opinion concerning the re- spective merits and faults of the three candidates and their parties. In the second section during the next few weeks will be published a series of articles coitcerning the scandidates, written by competent observers on the campus. In doing this The Daily takes no stand; it merely wishes to en- courage discussion and serious thought on the part of its readers. Other universities in the country appear to have been more successful in encouraging meetings and addres- ses by members of the Republican, Democratic, or Progressive parties. At Yale, for instance, there was a giant mass meeting last night in Woolsey hall under the auspices of the Republican club, 4ddressed by two Yale graduates,. Senator James W. Wadsworth and Lieutenant-Gov- ernor Hiram Bingham of Connecticut. It was attended by as many hundreds of intelligent people as are usually present at pep meetings at Michigan. And this is only one of, a series of such meetings. The University has a Republican club which has already done admir- able work in promoting the registra- tion of absentee voters. It also has a Union which might very well appoint; a committee to arrange for a series of talks by national figures in politics, alumni if possible. It is a work which both organizations might promote REBELLION AND COERCION The history of Ireland has been a history of alternate rebellion and coercion; it was not until very recent- ly that there was any atttempt on the 'part of the English people to appreci- ate. some of the natural feelings of resentment among the people of the Emerald Isle, nor any attempt on the part of the Irish to meet the English half way. The history of the troubles began years ago when Scotsmen were sent to Ireland by the hot-headed James to settle on the territory which Irish hearts held inviolate. The his- creditable to the University of Michi- gan if such an opportunity should be ignored. -Preston Slosson, Assistant Pro- fessor of History. rATED ROLDV BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICA. j" TIONS cover that is pertinent to the recent debacle at Urbana-Champaigne. We mention it only sort of en passant, because we intend to run a large re- view of it in the next issue of this department. There's something to dream on, hey? Mr. Jason Cowles. .._. _ G 4 -- -- - -----w . BOOKS and SUPPLIES for all Colleges at GRAHAM'S, (at both ends of the diagonal walk) S " MUSI C AND DRAMA , 11'Board in Control of Student Pub- tory of the present troubles, however, ;iBain rolowSuent a for our propose begins in 1912, lications,' we are aware, is not a when as a culmination of the agitation particularly catchy phrase to head the of many years. h o m,e rule col with; but it so chances that it was w h i c h h a d 1 o n g been the the first piece of printing that hap- pened to strike the old eye as we dream of the patriots, was pro- started work. If you can think of posed. It was then that the religious athnber,sendytuiand we'll conflict blazed into full flame, and anything better, send fit in andwe'll Northern Protestant Ireland and use it tomorrow. Or the next day. Nortern rotstan Irlandand* * * Southern Catholic Ireland clashed on the field 9f honor. It was the fear on We print herewith (below, in fact) the part of Ulster that she would be the first intallment of a gripping novel forced to support her less pros- composed by ourself. It will be a novel perous brothers, which actuated Sir that deals with a fella's childhood, Agar Robartes to move that four coun- next his youth, next with his ma- ties should be left out of the union. turer years, and finally (in due e.ourse) with what will probably be This Afternoon: Tryouts for Comedy Club at 4 o'cloick in Newberry hall. JERITZA, HEIFETZ, AND CORTOT Tomorrow evening Madame Jeritza is to open the 'Choral Union series which puts everything in motion: after the first concert the year is on. Jer- itza, herself, is the sensation of the hour, and her appearance in its way becomes as important as the engage- ment of Caruso. She is radiantly beautiful, climaxing her luxuriant maturity, she has a full, fruity so- A T ___. , which is irresistable. The Duncan sisters dental musical comedy and the inci-I is a good pro- its desirable ity. duction, worthy and undesirable of all public: IR'VING WARMOLh, g0.:Sc, ORa kLUA E:'I A 0 RFI .1', i) ClIropa dbtOR t apedist N. University Ave. 1,1;ont. 2652 CiAR N gighs - - 5oc to $2.50 > i C Wei d. mat. - Sac to $25 'Sat. Mat. - 50c to 12.00 I ,o Wf T TLE [DEVIL" 1 L 0CTOBEjR, 1924 S M T w T F S 1 2 3 w 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 .20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 -28 29 30 31 ,. In January of 1913, Sir Edward Car- son, the champion of the cause of Northern Ireland proposed that Ulster be excluded, but both suggestions were vetoed. In 1914, after the arming of Ulster, partition was again pro- 'posed, with the new feature of coun- ty. option for withdrawal from the union. Ulster, still, hesitant, rejected the idea, preferring to cling to the government at Westminster., The war came, and with it, a new rebellion, in the time honored custom of the Irish. A new partition scheme was proposed in the vain hope of quieting the stirring mutterings of civil war. The proposal came in new form, in which neither the scheme of county option nor the exclusion of Ulster with its nine provinces, but a new suggestion that six counties, pre- lominately protestant in Northern Ireland, be separated from the rest of Catholic Ireland. Down, Antrim, Derry, Armagh, 'Fermanagh and Tyrone, the last two being catholic largely. This proposal was accepted in June of 1916, but came to noth- ing. In 1917, a renewal of the offei was blocked by the resolute opposi- tion of Ulster. The next important step in the his- tory of the Irish question came in 1920, when partition became a legal reality, and Ireland became a Free State. The pact which separated Northern Ireland from the South, was accepted regretfully by Ulster, who would have preferred to remain with- in the pale of English jurisdiction, but the South would have none of it,. The fight went on with increasin. bitterness, until the struggle ulti-' mately led to the signing of the treaty hi 1921 which brought into being, the Irish Free State. Ulsterl, was given the right of voting herself out, but in the event that she left the union, she had to submit to a boundary commission. Northern Ireland did vote herself out of the union, and for the past three years, the two nations have gone their separate ways, Ulster still functioning under the old act of 1920, the South, braving the dangers of independent governance. This brings the story to the point in the last quarter, when the trouble broke out anew, resulting in the over- throw of the labor government. The details of the difficulty will be dis- cussed in an issue in the immediate' future. j his untimely demise. prano, and possesses striking drama- We 'are not any whiz at book-re- tic ability. In addition, she has a cer- Ne viewing, criticizing, etc., but we ven- tain magnetic vivaciousness that Noticej ture to predict that it will be a bold should work her audience to a sing- piece" of writing. ular pitch of enthusiasm, similar, We haven't thought of a title yet. perhaps, to the first appearance of We clean and reblock hats and caps * * * Amato, when the audience even threw and do it RIGHT. You will appreciate Chapter One programs to express their satisfaction, having your hat done over in a clean Arthur had not been in school so to Leginska's debut, Mary Garden's, and sanitary manner, free from odor very many days before Miss Lamb said or the last recital here of Matzanauer and made to fit your head. to' him and the rest of the children:--those very few occasions when our Tod pimeopdlteres fhave affi drk:prim, stodgy audience lost its coll- FACTORY HAT STORE Today, people, we have Raffia work ctive head. 617 Packard St. Phone 179 insteaectiveinhead. Then they had Raffia work, just as More than this, however, the recital (Where D. U. R. Stos at State) Miss Lamb said they would. tomorrow evening marks the first of i - Each pupil was given a long, limber a series of artists, quite surpassing -... '~",,,,;" piece of wood that would be called a in talent the majority of former pic fwo htwudb aldacourses. Heifitz is one, combining a I withe if this were an Irish Folk Tale,cr Hf i e o i but this is not an Irish Folk Tale. faultless technique with a heaven- Arthur, as well as the rest of the sent sense of interpretation; Cototat another, who comes in a class apart Let's all wave a Mum at the pupils, were also given a lot of Raffia, =( 1 lwreas i with only Rachmaninoff and Gabrilo- game-f which looked like weak Brown paper wiholahmnnf.n ab'o . gm- that had not been inspected very care- witch comparabale to him; and finai y Choicest yellow mums in town, fully by No. 364 before leaving the 'the, quiletly reserved, very sin-ere 50c and 75c. ; factory. It was cut into lo1g strips. Sophie Braslau.ow Po Pon Corsages $100 e iSuch a group represents a unique holder. opportunity, and the fact that th re A speccal Discount to fraterni- Arthur did not know what a plate-- are still seats left for the coursea s holder was for, and none of his ac- would be a disgrace were Hill audi- quaintances could tell him. He did torium not such a preposterously largeA not ask Miss Lamb, but worked busily building with its sixteen hundred odd Al i -ror Floral1, away with his Raffia, instead. He did seats in the second balcony alone. not finish his plate-holder. Naturally, of course, these few re-C Om pany That was on a Wednesday. maining tickets will 1) sold by tomo- Phone 1630. 122 E. Liberty S+. in On Friday Miss Lamb said to her row night, but the student who is not E pupils as they were about to go home clever enough to snatch this remain- ^- ----" --' for lunch, "This afternoon we will in chance becomes ridiculous verifying not have Stencil-work, but you chil- the legend of his conventional corn- dren will repair to the High School placency. for Manual Training." * * * Our Business So after lunch Arthur went to the THE COMEDY CLUB TRYIOUTS high school, where he and his class- To those who may not have noticed Grow s Ever mates were met by a rather ugly man, the announcement in the Sunday is- who led them into the building. They sue, being outward bound from Ur- trooped into a largeroom filled with bana and the like, attention is called L rger tables, and the ugly man picked up a for the third "time-always the effec- plane and'explained how to use it to tive number of repetitions-'to the square a board. Arthur paid close at- Comedy club tryouts at 4 o'clock this tention, and was quite sure he knew afternoon and tomorrow in Newberry how it should be done. Hall. "Now," said the ugly man, "I want I 'Everyone interested in dramatics beC alse all you fellows to go ahead and make should and will attempt to gain mem- a sleeve-board." bership in this organization. It is "What is that?" Arthur whispered among the three groups of its kind to his chum John. on the campus accomplishing really "I don't know," answered John interesting, satisfactory results. The We take special care to softly. others, as you can infer if you read a -idivid Arthur sawed himself a piece of thousand things between the lines of pa every ua pat- wood, and set it nicely into a vise, and an announcement printed elsewhere,Iion., then began to plane away at one side are gradually passing to oblivion- of it. Now and then he would take it only too well-lost, perhaps. out of the vise and run his Try- * * * You will enjoy Square over it, just as the ugly man THE FACULTY CONCERTS Th Fountain Room had. done. But it was never quite Mr. Andrew Haigh, a former grad- eutiful level. uate of the University School of Mu- Beautiful Neither Arthur nor John finished sic, who has returned to Ann Arbor squaring one side of their boards, al- this year both as a member of the though a good many of the others did. piano faculty of the School of Music I When they were finally dismissed and instructor of musical theory infriB for the afternoon (after locking up the University, will appear as the I.7IS[ their work in neat little drawers, and soloist in the first Faculty recital of R putting away the cross-cut saw, the the season at 4:15 o'clock Sunday rip saw, the plane, and the Sloyd afternoon in Hill auditorium. SHOP knife) John said to Arthur, "I would Mr. Haigh has gained a marked na-S wouldn't you, Arthur?" standing ability, entirely free from I th Ard "I think I would," answered his superficial mannerisms, and gifted chum. with an unusual technical ability. His (To be continued.) local concert will be particularly in- * * * teresting because it will include, with A person who modestly signs him- the exception of the Medtner Sonata, self H. L .R. '27, delivered himself of the same numbers that composed his the following statement in the Campus program last jSaturday in Aeolian Opinion column yesterday: Hall, New York city. ( "And in my estimation, our foot- * * * '- ball team did not lose the game at "TOPSY AND EVA" 4 Champaign Saturday afternoon. It was A review, by John Garlinghouse. lost by the unhearty supporters that The title of this comedy which has should have, with a wave of enthus- had a three months run at the Selwyn iasm carried our men over the top." theater Chicago, is aptly chosen, for We hardly know what to say in without the inimitable Duncan sisters refutation of this bold assertion; nor as little black Topsy of sore toe fame are we sure that H. L. R. Is entirely and her little mistress, Eva, there .= wrong. He has brought up a point would be nothing. The plot, what there JohnSays. here that will bear thinking over. is of it, is negligible, the music is Still, he should be annihilated on fair, and only the pickaninny chorus the grounds that he is another of those is worthy of mention. It is an ordinary IwYour oneyO== guys who still think the war is going musical comedy which will live and G4- F t on ."Over the top" indeed! Pfaugh! die with the Duncan sisters. - Oes IurLhler * * * The success of these sisters of w 'at the Mr. Hobbs'statement in yesterday's Cicero fame is difficult to analyze.-a Daily that Mr. Stefansson is a "re- Their lines are not particularly start- markable though very human person- ling-in fact they border on the vulgar G O O D EA T S ality" puts us in mind of Don Herold's and the commonplace. And their ac- - new book--"So Human," In the first tions are acceptable only because of a a y new. CoKA >J ruman. are T A i THE MICIGAN THEATRE LEAGUE Presents "The Romantic Age," by A. A. Milne New Whitney Theatre, Friday Evening, October 24. Produced by the Cleveland Playhouse. This is the first of a series of three plas. Patrons of the Theatre League's plays last year may reserve their same seats until Wednes- day night, October 22. After tis daie all series tickets will be placed on sale indiscriminateiv. Cheeks shouil be sent to C'lenient A. Smith, Secretary, 1706 Soutlh Univer siy A eful. Series tickets prices are: Yirst fourten rows orchestra, $,00: remainder, $4.50. First four rows, balcony, $3.00; remainder, $2.25. Hex office sale of single tickets for "The Romantic A,.e" at the theatre, Friday, Octobcr 21. © o.-E.co. The FiskBuilding, New York City CAR=i,E & HASINGS -Architects "Designhig in Masses' HE new architecture transcends detail and expresses the component solids of the great buildings of today and tomorrow. Gigantic profiles are reared against the sky-true expression of structural facts has now come into its own in architectural design, linking architect and engineer ever more closely together. Certainly modern invention--modern engineerng skill and organization, will frove more than equal to the demands of the architecture of the future. ®OTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY Offices'in all Principal Cities of the World d M ..n i a aenrs+snwwrs- -m-a:mn+ m-^:".-m ._., ,"e. a-r,. rmr: ro:.::: -.xr";.,:. - - - - - -- - - -- CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of commun cants will, however, be regarded as C confidential upon request. HISTORY STUDENTS-ATTENTION To the Editor: I should like to call the attention of graduate students and of upperclass- men seriously interested in history to two important present opportunities. The American Historical Associa-' tiofi meets this year, December 28th to 30th, at Richmond, Virginia. It is the one opportunity existing during the entire year for all who are in- terested, in either the teaching or 'in- vestigation of history to meet their colleagues from all over the United States. To make attendance more pos- sible, the meetings always occur dur- ing the winter vacation and the rail- roads offer excursion rates for the round trip. Membership also brings with it subscription to the American Historical Review, the official pub- lication of our profession. Those who wish to apply for membership can either communicate directly with the Association or obtain application blanks to mail from my office (4007 1 Literary) at office hours. The other opportunity is of a more general character. You will find an- nounced in The Daily from time to time meetings of a study group on the League of Nations. This is not a pro- pagandist organizatiop; the individual members of it may at other times and I ! t ,A:,; , t- -- , i Kd -I: Sweaters for Sport The cricket sweater still leads the fall fashion race, with the coat sweater advanced to a close second. Our stock con- tains all the newest shades and styles. You'll need something warin and good looking to slip on under your coat next Saturday when Michgan starts her come-back. Prices range from $5.95 to $10.9. Twelve Strands of 'Silk and a Though it sounds like a fr'ag went from Arabian Nights, there is little less romance in the secret of a silk stocking th'at knows not the ill fortune of a .er ru. This is only one fea ture of cur own Ruby Ring Full Fashioned Hosiery. $1.85 and $2.50. Thr Li tk Sister Iiow ickled the _t K St will Ice wh n Big Sis.cr, away at collcc, rep1nxs n s will one of these cute lale bears. They will gladl stand efficient guard aver your dress- i i - i