w".- ,- ........ nday -d in of Western Conference Editorial Press is exclusively en- r republication of all news to it or not otherwise er and the local news pub. at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, s, second class matter. Special rate granted by Third Assistant Post- Feral. ion by carrier, $3.50; by mail, Ann Arbor Press Building, May. Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; busi- V ocutnal guiuance, extenmui ser- vice, and student conference are fur- thered. The cosmopolitan life of the University is made more effctive because of the S. C. A.'s work among the foreign students in our midst. The Upper Room Bible class is an institution which has been a source of inspiration to hundreds of stu- dents for many years. Such, then are the S. C. A.'s activ- ities-they appear when written to- gether to constitute a huge task. As such they are being conducted suc- cessfully and deserve the financial support of those concerned. There. can be no doubt as to the need for our Christian associations. Anything which will promote a Christian spirit of good-fellowship among students is wbrthy of support. The S. C. A., and the Y. W. C. A. are not charity organ- izations. If they serve the student, he should contribute. The) are asking no more in the campaign. OASTE- ROLLS SPOSE A GUY SAID III AND THE OTHER GUY SAID La fI We aren't going to pull any such paragraph. And what's more, we aren't going to dinner any more than the literary colyumist was. -Mr. Jason Cowles. I Chapter 2 (of the novel) When Arthur was twelve years old he joined the Boy Scouts. He had seen pictures of them on the front of the Saturday Evening Post handing I swords to a beautiful lady with Lib- erty written across her forehead, and they always looked so nifty in the picture that he lusted after a Scout suit. All the boys in his grade belong- I Personal Chr istmasCar MUSIC AND TRAMA GRAHAMrI'S EDIThRIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176.1[ ,JWAAINrG EDITOR PHILIP . WAGNER itr.. ..... ..John G. Garlinghouse Cw. Editor............Robert G. Ramsay Night Editors - Lmas . enry JhnConrad C.g .DaIs e lhC bnr nneth C. Keller Norman R. Thal forts Editor «..'', .; «Willam IH. Stonenan rnday Editor.......Robert S. Mansfield oien's Editor...........WVeena Moran tii gand ti raa..,Robert B. ederson legraph Editor......William J Walthour Assistants snise= Barley W inield H. Line° arion Barlow HaoldA. Moore slie r Bennet Carl E. Ohlmacher rffa Blicknel William C. Paterso srman Boxer i;elen S. Ramsay nith Cady Jr. Rgina Reichmann ilard B.':avesrosbr Marie Reed lentine L Davies Edmarie Schraudr es W. ernamberg Frederick 1.Shillito seph O. Gartner Fredk. K. Sparrow, Jr. anning Youseworth C. Aithur Stevens zabeth s. Kennedy Marjory Sweet izabeth Liebermann Frederic Teimos ancis R. Line Herman J. Wise BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 "USINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER vertisi..................E. L. Dunne dertisiug....... ..J. Finn ivertising.................H. A. Marks v rtising..............H. M. Rockwell counits.... . ...........Byron "Parker rclation...............R. C. Winter blication...... .......John W. Conlin + Assistnts W. Arnold W. L. Mullins %V. K.utt 1, F. Mast )rdon Burs Hx. L. Newmann Dentz Thomas Olmstead ilip Deita J D. Ryan aid Fox N. Rosenzweig rman Freehling Margaret Sandburg FE. Hamaker F. K. Schoenfeld Johnson . H. Sinclair H. Kramer F. Taylor >uis W. Kramer MIDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1924 ight Editor-KENNETH C. KELLAR CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS There are on the campus two organ- ations whose futction in life is Afinite, whose purpose is being 'aught to fruition quite successfully. hey are not essentially boosters' ubs, they are not formed with t e definite goal of furthering the wel- re of Michigan teams everywhere. hiey try to keep before the student dy the necessity for a consideration religion as a moving force in mod- n life, and tend to remove the antag- isms of creed and race. These oups are the Student Christian as- ciation and the Young Women's 4ristian association who yesterday )ened their annual campaign for nds. The latter of the two organizations ems to be entirely fulfilling its ission in life. The majority of women e connected with the work in one pacity or another, and every wo- an is at least cognizant of the effort ing made by those in charge. The aders are' an inspiration and the ork productive of results. This is rgely because the -women support as they do their League, their hletic association, and the rest of eir activities. They w&ill withoutr ubt be eminently successful in their aancial drive. They deserve to be. On the other hand the confidence the student body in the produc- re work of the S. C. A. is not so rtain. Probably because the male adent body is so large, because ey have had no recent reason for .ification, there is not the universal pport of the S. C. A. or the Union tich characterizes simliar women's ganizations. The average student es not feel his connection with the rmer of these groups. It is 'not, like e Union, a place where he can eat, ep, swin, or dance regularly. It es not have any contact with those tivities which seem to predominate s life while in college. It is not a estion of whether or not these are >re important than those of the S.1 A. The matter simply resolves it- f into a question of present day EDUCATION, A STABILIZER 1 China is in a peculiar situation whenever any two opposing factions are contesting for the control of Pekin, according to Charles B. Warren, '91, ex-ambassador to Mexico andf Japan, who analyzed the problem of the orient in a recent address at Al- bion where the degree of doctor of laws was conferred upon him by Al- bion college. Dr. Warren explained' that control of Pekin meant little to China as a nation, since the means of communication and jurisdiction over the outlying states of the great re-f public are so inadequate that no gov- ernment can exegcise an effective control over the vast Chinese domain. Early this week news dispatches from Pekin announce that the city has been raptured by the "Christian gen- eral," Feng Yu-Hsiang, and that the former commander-in-chief, Gen. Wu Pei-Fu, has fled to the eastern coast. President Tsao Kun has turned over ed anyway. He was duly enrolled as a 'member in good standing' of the Woodchuck patrol, Troop 5, of the Boy Scouts of America. He thought he would never be the same after he had once taken the immense oath to do his best "to keep myself physically strong, men- tally awake, and morally straight." It would be inconceivable for him to go on grape-swiping expeditions with the boys of his neighborhood after that..... Fie procured an order from his scout- master entitling him to a Scout suit. (It was his main interest in the organ- ization, although he would have denied it to himself.) The order he took to the local representative of one Sig- mnund Eisner, a philanthropic magnate who had a monopoly on the Official Scout Uniform. He ordered a shirt, a coat, breeches, leggings, a web belt,. a natty red neckerchief and a hat. They would 'be here in about a week,' the clerk assured him. And they would cost about $16. (to be continued pretty soon.) * * * Professor Willian Herbert Hobbs was referred to by the Daily on Sun- day as one "considered an authority on international political affairs." I!- TONIGHT: The Band Bounce in Hill auditorium at7:15 o'clock. TONIGHT: Four One-Act Plays in University hall at 8 o'clock. , , ,* THE DENISHAWN PROGRAM The Denishawn Dancers with' Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn are to pre- sent! an entirely new ballet program Friday evening, November 7, at the Whitney theater. This will be their third consecutive appearance in Ann Arbor, each time with increasing suc- cess. The recital will include the follow- ing numbers: I Allegro Risoluto .....Edward Schutt. Denishawn Dancers. Adagio Pathetique..........Godard Ted Shawn. Scherzo Waltz.,............Ilgenfritz Doris Humphrey. Album Leaf............Scriabine Prelude..... ...........Scriabine Ruth Austin and Charles Weidman. Waltzes ....... ....... Schubert i Ruth St. Denis. Voices of Spring...........Strauss Denishawn Dancers. II, Cuardo Flamenco (Spanish Gypsy Dance Scene) Ruth St. Denis, Ted Shawn, and the Denishawn Dancers. IIIT) Tragica (Silent Dance) NOVEMBER, M T W S 2 9 16 23 in 3 10 17 24 .4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 1924 T F 6 .7 13 '14 20 21 27 28 I1 S 1 8 15 22 29 Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk __ .. _, ,.... . b Notice I can improve your style and make you a better player. I can teach you a new style of bass and new syncopated effects. Single lessons or'a course of ten, BILL WA TKINS DIRECTOR GRANGER'S ACADEMY ORCHESTRA For Appointments call at Granger's Academy or Phone 788. .. I' 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 X17 lackard St. Phone 1792 (Where D T. R. Stops at State) I f ; , WVe could serve foods in a much smaller variety, but we couldn't give patrons the complete satisfaction they find here at present' I ( _ r the reins of the government to his The occasion for this eulogy was the former cabinet and the selection of introduction given him by the editor former Premier Tuan Chi Ji as h the 1, f'he ec onde ectinn asthaaor of .Doris HumphreyaCharles Weidman. new chief executive is expected to re- an article on President Coolidge. Pro- Doris Humphrey, Charles Weidman, sult in a new era of peace for China. fessors Campbell and Burrows, who and the Denishawn Dancers. With the continually changing gov-- were cracking up the Messrs. Davis Balinese Fantasy (Javanese music by ernment and the general ignorance in and LaFollette respectively, were de- Paul Seelig) the part of the common people in the scribed merely as Democrats and Pro- Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn. remote districts of the country, it is gressives. Balerina Real ............Targenhi lit'tle wonder that China is noted for Aside from the question of wheth- Doris Humphrey. her instability. It seems pitiful that er Mr. Hobbs is an authority on inter- Five American sketches (created by she must forever be in turmoil due national affairs, The Daily had no Ted Shawn:) to the ambitions of some petty .army I business saying so at that time. It .a. Crapshooter chieftain while her Japanese neighbor simply forced a mental discount of the . Charles Weidman. occupies a place among the four lead- other two articles, and was unfair to . roun { ing nations of the 'world. the mhen who wrote them. jTed Shawn and Anne Douglas. Yet, the reason for this situation is * * * c. Gringo Tango apparent, according to Dr. Warren, Order of business of a Daily staff Ted Shawn and Ernestine Day. in Japan 90 per cent of the people can meeting, presented herewith for the d. Boston Fancy (1854) both read and write, while in China benefit of those who have never had Denishawn Dancers. the reverse of this obtains with 90 per the pleasure of witnessing that week- Dance to the Black and Gold Sari .... cent of the citizens unable to do either. ly holocaust: ...... .. . S. Stoughton I American citizens may consider them- 1. A person hight The City Desk ;Ruth'St. Denis. selves fortunate that no such prob- calls an interimnable roll. Valse ........................Chopin lem exists in the United States, thanks 2. The Editor remarks that there Anne Douglas and Georgia Graham. I to the ideals of education which were has been some improvement in the Theodora, Empress of Byzantium .... held by the earliest pioneers and have work of the reporters. He may vary.....................Louis Horst been perpetuated throughout the this by announcing that the reporter's Theodora...........Ruth St. Denis years. As education tends to stabilize, work has taken a decided turn for the jConstantine ........Charles Weidman America need never fear a situation worse. He enlarges on this elementary Justinian ......... .....Howle Fisher such as exists in China. point by asserting that the 'general tone of the paper has' been better.' The Vision of Aissoua (Algerian A local photographer advertises that (Or worse) He urges cooperation as Dance drama) he will give personal attention to the only solution of the eternal prob- I Scene I. The Mosque of Sidi Okba Inear Biskra. every order of photographs before lem of how to improve the paper. Scene II. The House of Fatma, a they are delivered. An admirable prac- 3. The assistant managing editor is coffee-house in Algiers. tice indeed in a majority of cases! then called on for words 'of wisdom. Ruth St. Denis, Ted Shawn, and the He replies that he has nothing to say, Denishawn dancers. Fred B. Smith and Sherman should and thereupon reads a list of remarks * * * have had a conference before they from a sheet of paper in his hand. THE PLAY PRODUCTION PLAYS made their declarations on war. Both 4. The night editors are then called Professor Hollister will open his of them connect it with the same place 'upon, privatim et seriatim, for samples Play Production course this evening but in a varying relationship. of their sagacity. They criticize the with the production of a contrasting staff during. the first semester, i. e. bill of one-act pieces. The cast for News Item: "45 students enroll in before the political campaign for the first number, "For Distinguished short course in agriculture at M. A. C." managing editor begins, and praise the Service" by Florence Knox, will in- Well, well-so they do teach agricul- saie people indischiminately during lude Mary Van Buren as Catherine, ture at East Lansing, after all. the entire second semester. When they Sybil Clark as Mrs. Ethel Harding, ,-i- -have nothing specific to say, they and Virginia Cronin as the maid. Once again Michigan students will speak sorrowfully of the many style "Martha's Mourning" by Phoebe learn about their Union. The annual errors they have been forced to era- Hoffman will be second on the pro-~1 drive for life memberships is soon to dicate from the copy of the week past; gram with Lucille Bellamy as Mar- begin. or they discourse agedly on such fine itha, Ludema Williams as the Aunt, and .-points of. the journalistic technique { Mildred Boyce as the Neighbor. Pre- If the issues in the political cam- as "the nose for news" or "getting to luding the final play, "The Impertin- paigns were published more often they Arnow the profepors on your beat. ence of the Creature," a short skit by might be remembered longer. That's the only way to get those men Gordon Cosmo-Lennox, is cast wit to talk. They're busy-much busier Valentine Davies as the Gentleman than you are-but they're willing to and Margaret Ainsworth, the younger CAMPUS OPINION talk. It's in the casual conversations Widow. Anonymous coinmunications will be with these profs that the big news "Sweethearts," a two-act comedy by disegarild Thowever esregrded"s crops out." Or they say the leads have W. S. Gilbert will conclude the pro- confidential upon request. been terrible. Or that the copy has duction. June Knisley Simpson takes been dirty. the leading role of Jenny Northcott, UNFORTUNATE PARTIZANSHIP 5. When all the night editors have Robert Henderson the part of Sir The reply to Prof. Fisher written tittered something-even if it be only Harry Spreadbrow, Claude Sifritt, Wil- by Mr. Roosevelt's sister at Professor a plea that the staff members pick cox the gardener, and Geneva Wheel- Hobb's behest answers itself. She up more papers around the office- er, Ruth the maid. quite carefully points out that Mr. the M. E. asks if 'anyone has anything * * * Roosevelt's comments were made else.' Thereupon the assistant M. E. THE ORGAN RECITAL without actual knowledge of the reads another item from his paper- Palmer Christian, University organ- League and its proposed organization. saved for this occasion. ist, will play the following numbers She reiterates that everything he said 6. Somebody mentions something he at the Twilight Organ recital thi-s was uttered on blind assumptions of thinks "should be watched pretty afternoon in Hill auditorium at 4:15 what might be. It is a trifle difficult carefully." o'clock: to reconcile this with her statement 7. Somebody else thinks "those are Fantasia in G minor ..........Bach that Mr. Roosevelt and Ser.ator Lodge the kind of things that oughta be Aftonfrid (Evening Peace).....Hagg carefully prepared amendments to checked up pretty carefully before Rondo Copriccio .............Lemere this then unknown and unrevealed they go in the paper." Sonata, number 4.......Guilmant covenant, but it does serve to streng- 8. The Managing editor agrees with Cavatina .......................Raff then the suspicion that the opposition the last speaker and mentions the Marche Russe .............Schminke of Senator Lodge was purely political finest example of Daily spirit for the and partizanly selfish. If amendments week-he capitalizes the DAILY vo- Would you say that the one time were prepared far in advance of the cally-and asks whether anyone has member of an outlaw band who is to publication of the instrument to be anything alse. speak to a group of students at Cor- amended it is most certain that no No one has anything. They all know nell university next Saturday ought other motives could hav insired that when DAILY sirit has been to feel at home? A rcade Cafeteria Upstair s, Ni c k els A r cad e I _____________________________________________________ I ,.____________________________ _________-. - ., - o 4. I, Anytime, any place- the Four Winds coat l Hart Schaffner & Marx designed it to meet more uses than any other garment you can buy. Wear it on rainy days, c hilly days, for motoring, business, dress wear, It will stand hard usage and always look right.. now! Get yours To reach the goal in the campaign, then, the S. C. A. must convince this average student of his part in the work. Since The Daily is certain of' essential function of the organization, a review of its worthy projects is a propos here. The S. C. A. has given the freshmen this year a "bible" which is complete in all respects, which ranks favorably with other college "bibles." Freshman discussion groups have been organized under competent leaders whose purpose is the discus-1 sion of campus problems and other current issues of universal interest. Sixty first year men are thus being initiated into an understanding of the1 , i 1 I ; l 1 $45 Others priced $25.to $75 Re ule-~Conli~n Co. SI'