THE MICUIGAN DAILY FRID~AY. OC'I __ _ a.. ., y u r. __ _ .. ___ ._._ R JNJ A TOBER 31, 1924 trl i ttn tti1 Published every morning except Monday d uring the University year by the Board in Control of Student Pubhications. AMembers of Western Conference Editorial Asoci~ate ri. The Associated Press is exclusively en- t~t;.cd to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub. lished therein. Intered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, k.i higarn, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master Genrral. SCbscrirtionaby carrier, $3.SO; by mail, $4.00- Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. nard Street. phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; busi- teas, 960. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176--M MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor.. ......John G. Garlinghouse News. .ditor'............Robert G. Ramsay Night Editors ,eorges . Davis Joseph Kruger T horas ' Henry Jon Conrad Kenneth C. Keller Noran R. Thal Sports Editor.........William H. Stoneman Sunday Editor.........Robert S. Mansfield Women's Editor...........Verena Moran Music and Diramna.. Robert B. Henderson Telegraph Editor.....William J. Walthour Assistants L~ouise liarlcy Winfield H". Line Narion Parlow Harold A. Moore Lslie S. iennets Carl E. Ohlmacher Ndorma l1>ickneli William C. Patterson HErrnan Boxer Velen S. Ramsay Smith Cady Jr. Regina Reichmann Whillai d f,,. (rosby Marie, Reed Valentine L. D~avies Edmarie Schrauder Va metW. Fernberg Frederick H. Shillito Joseph O. Gartner Fredk. K. Sparrow, Jr. Maning ilous~worth C. Arthur Stevens Elizabeth S. Kennedy Marry Sweet Elizabeth Liebermann Frederic Telmos Francis R. Line Herman J. Wise BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960, BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER Advertising...................E. L. Dunne Adv,,,isng.....................J .Finn Advertising..................H. A. Marks Adv-:rtising..............H. M. Rockwell Accounts....................Byron Parker Circulation...........-......L C.Winter Publication....... ..John W. Conlin 'Assistants P. W. Arnold W. L. Mullins W. Vi. Ardussi A F. Mast - Burris 14. L. Newmann F. Dents Thomas Olmstead XLriWp ieitz 3 . Ryan David Fox' . Rosenzweig Norman Freehling Mar aret Sandburg . W. E. Hatnaker F. A. Schoenfeld . T,-hn , S. N. Sinclair L. 11. Kramer F. Taylor Louis W. Kramer FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1924 Night Editor-NORMAN R. THAL A CONSERVATIVE MINISTRY Stanley Baldwin will be the prob-" A majority of the students and not a few of the alumni have favored this. and have been spreading their propa- ganda for re-naming the East Lansing school "Michigan State college." Until but recently, however, those advocating the new title have met with but a half-hearted response on the part of the officials of the institution and of the state legislature, through T/ A rFORH 3A __ rtrrrm gmnrgfar 7z 6 Life in Gay Paris, as described in Carnahan's French Review whom the action must come. The first Grammar: intimation that any of these officials John:---Good evening, James, what have been won over to the cause came have you been doing for three hours9 Wednesday night when Dr. Kenyon L. You ought to have been (auriez du Butterfield, president of the Michigan etre) with us. It was indeed worth Agricultural college, addressing the the trouble. We visited that beautifult convention of the Michigan State old Catholic churc'i which is on the Grange, expressed himself as favoring other side of the street from our the proposition. Iboarding house. The M. A. C. president is quoted as James:--What a pity! Why didn't having said that "the institution is no you send for me? I was reading theI longer exclusively an agricultural col- guidebook when Professor Gautier enj lege, as it was a generation ago. En- tered and told me that I ought to goI gineering, home economics, and liberal and take a long walk. He said it arts courses have been added. B~as- AnIC X71 rh the tr blo to-p AND DRAMA ;THE DENISHIAWNS ARE COMING! Announcement has just been made by Don McIntyre of the engagement of Ruth St. Denis, Ted Shawn, and the Denishawn dancers for Friday evening, November 7, at the Whitney; theater. The only reason, naturally, that they were not re-engaged for Hill auditorium was because certain of the administrative authorities were disgracefully scandallized by the shocking spectacle of the country's; most superb ballet. The front row of Hill auditorium, P o- naChristmas Cards Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk ;' r, , i i Y 4 3 3 .anuds wl wr e rou e~ 1 Uktt UL:.ra o see - wou e~w wU of course, is too embarassing to view ing his decision on these facts, Presi- this great French city with it broad a dozen ladies clad in skin-tight dent Butterfield is of the opinion that clean street and its magnificent tights, even the most gracefully form-j "the time has come when the change parks. He was to cone and see me thisj should be made"ng ded, but as a consequent the perfor- evening. I don't know why he hasn'tmance in the Whitney should be With all due respect to Dr. Butter (Use etre) come. doubly beautiful In this appearancb field, there are one or two questions John:-He must be ill, because also, the C(kPany will he able to use which might be raised in regard to when I returned to the boarding- . this matter, dealing not so much with house just now he had been here al- their fullightli string ocequip- the actual changing of the name as ready for an hour. He used to have a Admittedly, the Denishawns are the with the possible significance which headache often when he taught at the greatest American ballet, but it al- may be back of the proposal. The first University. Would it be better to go ways creates a turmoil to add that query is: Do those who are props- and see him or let him alone? they are even aheadof similar Europ- ing the change desire it merely be-. James:-If something is the matter ean organizations. To place them cause the word "Agricultural" in thy with him he will send for a doctor at above Adolph Bolm, Pavley and Ouk- name is irksome to them because of once. There are many of them in this rainski, Isadora Duzncan-though I its rural connotation? In view of the district. only saw her in her latter-day decad- traditions of the school ever since John:-If it is the doctor who lives once, Fokine and Fokina, and finally It was founded as one of the earliest in the hotel beside us I am going away the patly pretty Anna Pavlowa seems of such state institutions, one hest at once; I owe him ten francs al- the height of exaggeration. But after tates to make such a charge. ready. all, it is all so logically obvious: these Yet, the only plausible alternative, James:-It would be better to pay other dancers, Pavlowa at the head of seems to be that the school is nO your debts. You have owed me twenty the list, present an intensely unnat longer to be primarily an agricultural francs for more than (de) two weeks. ural, artifical type of dancing. It is college, but rather a mere duplication the rigidly classic form of toe posing, of the University on a smaller scale. Advertisement in the Detroit Time4 pleasing but empty pirrouetting. Nat- However, we cannot accept this an- for Sunday last- ure did not intend a human being tGj swer if we can believe the statement THE PRINCE balance on the tiniest tip of one foot, of Dr. Butterfield made in the same OF'WALES the other perilously raised above the address to the effect that the major . torso in ridiculous defiance of the work of the college should be and will law of gravitation-it is, were we not be agriculture as long as he is at its ROSEDALE peculiarly accustomed to,'it, ungainly head. PARK. and forced. Because he would have felt quite If the main purpose of its existence Ruth St. Denis, on the other hand, is still to be the instruction and train- at home among such names as Stt lace at the very foundation of he ing of ecientific experts in agriculture, Iford Drive, Warwick, Gainshorough' plchnes a tselverydeoundnn o h mortechnique an absolute dependence o ingof cietifc epets n aricltueLancashire, wc, Winchester anDrd Dartmoocr why not keep the name as it stands, anashe nester tnd Drtour that which is most gracefully natural. Michigan Agricultural college? But, Instead of harking back to tortuous' if the aim is to become other than a evards, and Roads of Rosedale Park. 'hours in a musty rehersal hall, she school of agriculture, as Dr. Butter- This little notice explains away a imitates the vigorous bodily beauty field also intimated when he referred' of the animal and is keen sensory to the courses in engineering, home growing tendency in Subdivision nom-s economics, and liberal arts, the lat- enclature which has puzzledSu iv s The entire system of her vital, pro- ter of which courses has just been in- nAgressive art is founded on the signifi- stituted this year, then it is a dupli- ion in Ann Arbor, for instance, also cant theories of Dalcroze Eurhymics smacks strongly of the Old Country. cation of effort and; as such should Sresi hsPre fLn r and its subsequent primitive beauty. cationofeffuond sschsol Streets in this Parcel of Land are ' In all her programs, for Miss St. be frowned upon. named Exmoor Road, Overridge , Denis represents the experimenital. in- tDrive, Glenwood Boulevard (I thir;k.) repiecents the e rntain- ______________________________ventive center of the organization, AMPUS OPINION There are no streets, you observe. ! one has a sense of a living ponderous CMU S coNs Streets are common. 1 truth~ an encompassing inspir atio Aisreg'irds. 'I be nmes of conu rii And it's all so the Prince of Wales that never touches the stiffer ddgma- cants will however, hereearded as will feel at home. That oughta bring tic atmosphere of her contemporar confideni ial up~on request. ti topeeo e otmoay ! IEngland and America pretty close to- artists. ROOSEVELT AND THE LEAGUE gether, hey? * * * * * * 4AiR AND PATTISON (Continued from Page One.) An idea the realtors seem to have Guy Maier and Lee Pattison, the glady back any wise and honest ef- overlooked is that of christening the twain, you rememler, who have such fort to create a league of nations, Main Streets of the future "Thread- opposite, but properly artistic temper- but only on condition that it is needle Street," or "Great Russellaes, roplainitemChr-. treaed a anaddiionto, nd ot a ;aments, are to play in the Choral treat'ed as an addition to, and not as Street," or "Bond Street," or "Fleet Union concert Monday night in Hill a substitute for, the full preparedness Street." These, it must be admitted, auditorium. The artist of the fiery dis- of our own strength for our own de- are every bit as snooty as Sussex position is Mr. Maier; he of the digni- fense.' (Oct. 15, 1913.) Boulevard. 'In its esnce M.) Boson'peovsr-d * fled, and we suspect, dreamy nature, " 'In its essence Mr. Wilson's proposi- * * is Mr. Pattison. To those of you who tion for a league of nations seeni And the towns-why neglect this are given to a bit of frivolity inter- to be akin to the holy alliance of the important element in the national mingled with your education, it is nations of Europe of a century ago, geography? Why not Ypsilanti-near- rumored that Maier and Pattison play, which worked such mischief that the Wayne, Jackson-under-Lansing, " De- jazz for encores. Think of it: two re- Monroe Doctrine was called into be-I troit-between-New-York-and-Chicago? 1,.r., ,i n ,.,, , - OCTOBER, 1924 S M T W T F S ..1 2 3 4 .i 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 . Notice1 We clean and reblock hats and caps and do it RIGHT. You will appreciate having your hat done over in a clean and sanitary manner, free from odor and made to fit your head. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard St. Phone 1792 (W here D. U. R. Stops at State) r I I The Slickest Coat on theCampus! No well dressed college manris without one. It's the original, correct slicker and there's noth- ing as smart or sensible for rough weather and chilly days. Made of famous yellow water- proof oiled fabric. Has -all- round strap on collar andelas- tic at wrist-bands. Clasp-closing style Button-closing style Stampthecorrectname inyour memory, and buy no other. The "Standard Student" is made only by the Standard Oiled Clothing Co., N. Y. C. Slap one on i I i. I f i ' - f ' i . , .a *' 'XENBE RG CLOTHES FOR THE COLLEGE MAN t 1 L The DOUBLE BREASTED Suit TRUE to conservative ideas, these suits are cut correctly of plain tone blues and greys in woolensofrichquality, andtail- ored the LUXENBERG way withthat restraint of style dic- tated by present fashions. 3250 to 4250 NAT LUXENBERG & BROS. 841 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Ne~xt :tic wilig at Lan'prs B .te y, 301 a te tree No-wA) an'i 21st. Our style memo. book sent free on request I h n a ~ At All (I", "; heaI", I. i ARMW a1 Da cing Tonligh AT, GR ANGER'S And every Tuesday, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday E eBest Dance Music And Enterta nment B y Bill Watkin's "Granger Eight" 4 able choice for next prime minister of Great Britain as a result of the elec- tion Wednesday which swept into of- fice a clear majority of Conservative candidates. The significance of the re- sults is two-fold: it constitutes a dis- tinct repudiation of the Labor govern- ment's treaty with Russia, and it is believed by many to have sounded the death knell of the Liberal party. Late yesterday the Labor party had gained no seats from the Conserva- tives or the Liberals and had lost some to the Conservatives. They had pre- dicted previous to the election that they would make substantial gains even though they did not achieve a clear majority. Their failure to ac- complish this is probably a combined result of the unpopularity of the Rus- sian policy and the uncertainty con- cerning its success aroused at the last moment by the publication of the letter alleged to have been written by a prominent Russian minister, urging British workmen to labor against ex- isting governmental institutions. The authenticity of this letter has been denied by responsible authorities, but the damage was done. It was an emin- ently successful bit of election pro- poganda. The poor showing of the Liberal party and the failure of Paisley to re turn Asquith, the leader of this party, seem to indicate that the party's days as an important influence in British affairs are over. Asquith and other Liberal leaders refuse to admit this, as they very naturally would. It is apparent, nevertheless, that the party has been dealt a serious blow, that from now on the battle will be be- tween the Labor and the Conservative element. Mr. Asquith's political career has been at least temporarily inter- rupted, and his presence in the House of Commons will be greatly missed. The significance of the result to the ultimate hopes of Labor is difficult to determine. Labor lost little in the election, most of the Conservative gains having been at the expense of# the Liberal party. The accomplish, ments of Ramsay MacDonald as prime minister were many, his foreign policy except possibly for the Soviet treaty almost irreproachable. He was the first minister since the war who wasi able to cooperate with France ,in theI settlement of world problems. It is largely due to him and Premier Her- riot of France that the last League assembly was such a success, that the reparations problem is approach- ing solution. The Conservatives have the upper hand for the time being, but Labor continues to .hold a position of "C h .. . .- ._ M . _ .. ...._ j ! " ix Pei pie and I i I 4 I i t i An Auto Play Toreador with An Express Train" ChUa CHRYSANTHE- T UAIS to decorate the table c..rcr. The very attractivenes f f 1 gorgeous blossoms will "ve tiat inviting appearance 'IX-c .i so necessary to many A( J" ing especially to combat it. If it is de-I sired to do away with nationalism, it will work nothing but mischief. If it is1 devised in sane fashion as an additionI to nationalism and as an addition to preparing our own strength for ourI own defense, it may do a small amount of good; but it will certainly accomp-' lish nothing if more than a moderate amount is attempted, and probably the best first step would be to make the existing league of the Allies a going concern.' (Oct. 30, 1918.) "'For the moment the point as to which we are foggy is the League of Nations. We all of us earnestly desire such a league, only we wish to be sure that it will help and not hinder the cause of world peace and justice, There is not a young man who has fought, or an old man who has seen those dear to him fight, that does not wish to minimize the chance of future ,war. But there is not a man of sense who does not know that in any such movement if too much is attempted the result is either failure or worse than failure.' "Speaking of Wilson's fourteen points" Roosevelt continues: 'But nobody knows what Mr. Will son really means by them, and so all talk of adopting them as basis forE I peace or a league is nonsense, and, if the talker is intelligent, it is insin- cere nonsense to boot.' 'Let each nation reserve to itself and for its own decision, let it clearly set forth, questions which are non- . justiciable. Let nothing be done that will interfere with our preparing foi our own defense by introducing a I | l t tui -ctrcci-lG~ -i a nwau ....,. nownea ana respected pianists playing Be there, realtors! jazz. Undoubtedly it will be good synco- * * * pation, however, perhaps even super- We fondly hope that the young lady. lior to that of the pogy Paul White-. who signs herself "Amazon '25" had man. With them it is not a matter of the pleasure of seeing the scores of stooping to the popular taste, but a pigs who engaged in the freshman riot case ' of bringing out the best in the night before last on the campus. All music of the multitude. It is well, those who have espoused the cause of too, that our visiting artists are be- Women's Rights, we are sure, must ginning to understand this great big, have felt a distinct thrill run up their broad minded University of ours. For backs at the inspiring sight of 150 Mary Garden, simply craved to sing a ginches romping around hand in hand jazz song in Ann #Arbor and dared not. with some 500 wet smacks, howling for Mary Garden, the famous, feared our '28. high brow taste. I watched them and said to myself As for the program, in it are con- Well now Michigan is coming into hertamed several unique features. There is for instance, the "Arkansas Travel- on. * * * -r" by Mr. Pattison himself, which This now rendez-vous of Commerce again, is suggestive of jazz, is all and Education is gonna be the scene ! modern, unique, and original, and the of a Mardi Gras tonight. And, boy, will fitting and proper thing for the con- that be a Mardi Gras! Don't you think sideration of moderns. Quite remark- it won't, boy! 'At's gonna be a Mardi able and interesting to insert in our Gras that IS a Mardi Gras! At's all! daily routine. The whole is a delight- Ja see the list of prizes? Wahr's ful piece of music, perfectly able to Bookstore-book. Brown's Bookstore arouse pleasure which is appropriate, -book. O'Brien's Fruit Store-fruit. while it appeals at the same time to -boo. OBrin'sFrui Stre-rui. Ithe thirsty intellect. Mutt's Umbrella Shop-umbrella. City The Andanteladcts Cigar. Store-cigar. And don't think it The Andante and its variations, of wont b a ineciareiter.If ouSchuman, is well known, and illus. k won't be a fine cigar, either. If you trates the artists ability in the realms think it won't be a fine cigar you're o , -A-L__-. is not a message any of us wish to have written about us. 122 E. Liberty St. Phone 1630 I But how happy we are, if in our machine we have a well supplied Emergency Outfit, which we have brought into use when we have found some poor fellow traveler in trouble at the road side. If you have none, get it now. We have several sizes. G. CLAUDE DRAKE'S Drug and Prescription I¢: crazy. But if the C of C thinks it's gonna keep the local tots away from thu doorbells and garbage pails by any such transparent device as a Mardi Gras, they're-wrong. S* * * There are a lot of little two-inch topics that we could close this column with for the day. We could discuss the school amendment-ahout which we of the classical. A scherzo of Saint Saens is listed next in order. It is a pleasant recomendation which is giv- en of Saint Saens in the books. He makes great music by elaborating up- on triviality, and the finished work has a charm of its own particular own. This same Debussy has written the "Afternoon of a Faun," which was! meant to be an orchestral suite. It is one of the outstanding modern com- I