TL4LMICIGANt~A1 .- . ° Publiished every. morning except Monday tluring the l r uversity year by the Board in Control of Student, ub'.ications. embe rs of Western Conference Editorial Toe Associated Press is exclusively en- rtt:ed to the use for republication of all news I disp t che, credited' to it or not otherw~ise reditedt in this paper and the local news pub- l E n t. .ere inyo n Y , t th e p o s to ffic e a t A n n A rb o r , iciaas second class matter. Special rate el pocst:^e granted by Third Assistant Post- master General.k Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, 4Offices- Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M, busi. 'iess, 96o. EDITORlAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-M i c' i I ' SHAVE AND A HAIRCUT- might have cause to be thankful. I3 HECh:: However, if Thanksgiving' Day is to Chimes appeared, the other day, in accomplish its real purpose in any U1JS IC a cover designed to voice as questio, adequate:.way, it should be more' thanI AND which has long been in thec minds- a single day of thanks. In fact, it ~RA A. of men, both young and old. Is it right should be put a reminder to all D I.NI. that women shall invade that last Americans that there is a place for p___ sanctum of the persecuted sex-the giving thanks as well as a supreme barber shop? Is it fair that they should being to which to, offer those thank- - appropriate that one meeting place { offerings every day of the year. When -OORW NIGIIT Thle I'la3 which, for years, has been of thel it shall have meant this to America, Produetloniasl~<;es present "Shavings" very essence of 'masculinity?1 Thanksgiving Day may be said to have !,'t 8 r 'clfld keinii 1ersit11"1111. The qiuestion ig a hard one to solve;: hben truily successful. I " Beginl Your Christlaus 3Sh( jk5 i , nw CsJiur~,s u~a S a oppngNow i' i ; . and The Daily does not feel that in _____________ 11IAMAMQU P4 I CION? its position as Michigan's organ of The. question as to what to give your Sm year ,,ago, say six oz Sen opinion it dares venfure to mould fredsfrCrsmshsbe atyor eight, a dsr antic organization was tuettogtoa usoN s cly Iformed and 'christened 'Masques. Their stuentthogh ona qe .tln s obv-solved by the internal revenue bureau; ously partisan, on a question which, in; its. most. recent action limiting first producttion Was a program in, has long been smnouldering hin the! tax-exempt gifts to "only $50,000." collabjrrati9±lFrith the u~nivers>itym brat'ft~ nue e n ihSuch a relief!E Girl's Glee club consisting, 'along b esso th inue nina d ig ,Iif the proper spark were set to it,___________ other things, of a forty-miinut skit break into a consuming flame. Never- Movie admirers of Rudy Valentino, I about a vweoly man, a gentlemanf ac- the less, there can b), no harm in must be getting anxious to see if he tually made of knitted yarn who calling attention to a few of the more1 has lost any of hip enchantment by travelled through;l the various ps:ychic- obvious arguments both in favor of hiding behind his recently acquired al complexes, of a Guitry comedly rn- and opposing, the invasion. rnhm oo. til he was, finally completely Yin- Time has seen a steady advance in_______________ ravelled: at any late, the perfe'nVJ iV:cc oli; End' of ii IA 9I' re Diagonal Walk I i. - aatai,*.at,,wfl~sK +'. i. .3. '- T ~ Wr,' .nd ;e'm~r ..ms~fa,,a.,'nmm.&..,.,n.,,.o IhYan~sfa.'-,.s~ tu aL M. __ . __ . e MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor... ....... «..... John G. Garlinghouse News Editor ........... .Robert G. Ramsay Night Editors ,ccrge 4,V,)avis Harold A. Moore Tfhomnas P. lienry Fredk. Y_. Sparrow, jr;' Kenneth C. Kelle' Norman R. Thal , ports dt.... Wila H. Stoneman' ^onda) Editor.......... Robert S. Mansfield Woir' n's Editor.......... ,. Verena Moran :Mu ,sii and i 'rama......obert B. Henderson t cles-raph editor., ...William J. Walthour A ssistants Louise LHarley Winfield H. Line S arrion IBatow Carl E. Ohlmacher lie l S. ienrxeh, William C. Patterson sth E.ady)r.. ilelen S. Ramsay v llard B. Crosby Regina Reichmannl Valentine L. Davies Marie Reed f; res WV. F ernamberg Edmarie Schrauder f ose;ph 0. Gartner Frederick H. Shillito Mtanning iouse wortb C. Arthur Stevens Elizabeth S. Kennedy Marjory Sweet Elizabeth Liebermann Herman J. Wise BUSINESS STAFF? Telephone 860 RPSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER 'Advertising.... ..... "........E. L. Dunne Advertising..3. """ «... ""Finn Adver tising i...... «... «...... .....A. Marks "" .......... . ."....II, M. Rockwell :Accounts........ ".......Byron Parker Cicuaton ........... R.C. Winter '.Pulcaio: . .........John W. Conlin Assistants P. W. Arnold .' W L. Mullins W. V. Ardussi' IK F. Mast Gordon Burris 11. L. Newmfannf F. Mentz> Thomas Olmstead 1,hilip .leitz 3 D. Ryan David Foy N. Rosenzweig i orinan seeehlipig Margaret Sandburg W. E,~ Hamaker F. X. Schioenfeld F. Ti hn-,son S. H. Sinclair L. fl. Kramer; F. Taylor Louis W. K ramer t t : ,,_ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1924 Night Editor-F. X. SPARROW, JR.:: B~RAWLS OR BALL §7 As a result of a recent meeting of the Interfraternity counci, a com- mittee is now at work investigating conditions surrounding the giving of fraternity dances with a view to -rec- ommnending a plan by 'which the too numerous outsiders may be kept away. The fact that recent fraternity parties have developed into what might be termed "brawls" in the popular vern- ticular may be held 'accountable "f6r" the necessity for this action. Tl-ere can be little doubt in the minds of those stud'ents and faculty i ho- have attended some of the fall dances that there is a need for a change. It will be difficult, however, to carry bout a strenuous reform with- out curtailing unnecessarily the spit it of interfraternity hospitality developed recently. These very dances, while somre of themr have been made ob- jectionable by the conduct of out- siders, have done more to further the acquaintance of fraternity men and to encourage cooperation and good .feeling than any other one agent- a very necessary thing at Michigan. But to return to the parties-all of them have been a huge success' from the standpoint of the guest. True, there have been times when the. floor was too crowded, when there was so much noise as to drown out the in -' sic completely, but there has been an informality, a welcome which every- one attending has enjoyed. Perhaps. this feeling is typical of that riotousi younger generation of which we are, a part. Perhaps the students partici- patirig should have been shocked rathi- the 'cause of Feminism. Year by'°year Wentceta ayodjithol was ratther teriblei. women seem to be advancing-slowly, iIs still' "Dumb as a Fox" in spite of Tescedn erIr.J aeg buh osr~yto: ' strong-, the fact that he has gone to ChicgoNelson took c('i argo of th2 group, and holds. There wa s a ti' A^ Lhn wo- 'with s only tcoeciar'acteristic fervor, ' man's place ters d 9d-" 11~ the 'H"-ogs Depressed by record run "- ilsstins-sadad home, when to 'entn' e c -t alone ed nte hcgoTiun.Po -began to move toward a goal rapid- me~ant certain suicide to hci er rcpt t- niggie ! lyanroaig erfect?"ahine-W . tio. Tosewer tie dys henit ________________ Iprofessionlalism,. The first production was almost a criminal offense for the Even the American Federation of undJer his (ireeCe:n was I mere's ,"Tha demhure young thing to speak before Labor favors the World Court. Amazons," rrhich did much to raise being spoken to, and ,when it was i ____________________ asques in the osihmiat. en o. their, ::. ocially impossible for her to go ini]Ipatrons and' c edit. , d4espito, the swimming in -.nythin ~less than three CMPUS P[NiONpay biostwd enietaim I Idi~egade. Te nmesofcomuni ITrre'sn"ulty trheee,bro ught or four' bathing suits and, a overq A ex i'inous ;communications will be Th 'ter. owvbout coat or twio. Those dsdaydd Te aes, cmmo-ne cannotuliy tee"wi.l uc. help noticing, have passed. 1 confidential upon request. a success ghat Vtwo additional per- Then came women's suffrage, with I forniances wxere aidled to the original the attendant enfranchlisemient of mil-A FAIR DEFEAT one: qluite a., eat at the time fur aniy- lions of womsen all over the world. To the Editor: 1 btterpr.Th eun This all seemed reasonable, too. Why -{ oewt neettecminfa iet okuo hspo shouldn't the 'wonlen vote? No one'Inoewtineettecmuca. uto Ar. 2izsnotat- could find any reason sufficient to tion, written by one Mr. Richardson i quato, charing work; suzrely he hat: stop them. Now we are faced with1 making the claim that Michigan really never outdista n edr Ike ictorian the prospect of two women 'gover- won the game with Iowa Saturday in del}i~cac of i '>tMoshr el.i1 tmad- nors-in Texas and W yoming. PeopleIie of the fact that the visitors shhsi~eifi(,M.Nle s are curious to see how thinig,, will mittelvy is at a loss-and lbe him:;eif - were leading 9-2 when the game end- r ealiz es this best. of all--but in certain work; out in the two states; neverthe- lessthe arn'tcurius nouh t beed. Perhaps this is no true -criterion fantastic whimscy, iroical only an oc- alarmed: they know full well that the of ,.tle merit of. the two teams, brit it casion, his, directionl comes very near 'overnment will be run just as well, is generally accepted in sporting cir- to a positive genuis. if not better, than it was by the men. ces, and has, in the past, been en- Afte~r "Qualty St.reet" c,, e Je'orrF' Dut the question of women's hail-tr- l satisfactory. If the author of Jeromen's "Fannay and the Sirrcali cuts in men's barber snops- treY Problem,' and then fcling larger than There seems to be more opposition the opinion that Michigan "won tilef Sarah Crwswell Angell hall the organ- :ariingove ths laestinrad hanreal 'laurels" were given support, the, ization ire°se~ntd "The Importance of that which rose over the question of football world would be in a sad Being E ax nest" in the Wthitney th(e,,t- the suffrage. Men don't mind having unar.IIteeisayhigm rc. At the outset; such a play with an wromen mix in politics. But to have deiietaI irc ls ewe all-girl cast could be but a half-suc_~ them mix in antigs nesl e-cO55, but the, set fings were bea'etiful sonar; s frighrtfullly and revealinglytw teams which vie for certain l10on- and for tho- first time _'asques found masulneas a shave,. a haircut, or a os the world at large is in the dark themiselves' with a sinling f'und. shampoo, seems just a bit too 'much. regarding what it may be. But this: '- - - A corrospondent of this journal re- is beside the point.Ix u cently wrote that the 'last time he The fact is, Mr. Richardson's opin- IY sI was in a barber shop hie had planned iohns reflect a spirit which is to b,,) to purchase a clay facial massage, ilt decried on the Michigan campus, .or t inot be lost. ,r _ , atmrtnzw'sa ., ' Kr.. :: x.,,. - Y,, i+ t: ,.. ,. l~R'tv1X81X'SS~R1'. S^- -" r....,..o urauamaraaiau ae:uasa .s.:n+t u,: rry:. i f ii 1 ,: f C . °; . , , ti ' r d . 4 :. ; a 'Th .Green Tree Inn A Turkey LDirner To-day at 1:-2o o'clock V a i i Read the Want Ads: i . -205 Sui State St. Phone I1306-R :' -N () v L% ? B EIA, Ni T -W X9.4 T F n 1 ii"J "1? 317 24 11 L5 'f 12 1 J 27 7 14 21 S 29 .M .- ________________________. i _ W e clean anti reblock has nd c p I Smd do it RlVH-T. You wilt app~reciate bfit'ing youir hat dlone Ovier ini a clean grid Sanitary mnner, .ftee fromt odor: and made to fit your hBead. FAC'TORY HAT STORE 5, 17 I -)kal'd St. - lihone l71.) ("H'lere D: U. It. stoPs at State) I I VIRVIIO fir,!lU M0.S , GRAEVA "1M..- AND hIil 'RI hi lClilropodist Orthopedist 7071 . University Ave, Ii c re 2652; . -. . , f ' y : , a ., :e ' , c _ ,., :'r n... . y .pm .: r 'T }% At ';?z; i.:..,ma u.A «+ U o7-- -" , :fix , yc Y'l: ! ... 1 709 soF 'i UnivernitH d 7' S , % ' n FouaiSrvc Quality Candly Let Us Framtye Th'at Poo'n i For you before you send it away for Christma. You will find 6u>r pices are right. r k Y. -.-aInlllfikll~ SAViNG3 7APATMNT- , - e'%77 riT T r, 7 a ,r 7.-.- 2 Nickls Areade 0Opposite Sub-Stalmon ij Ei . fle nn..,n, er than delighted. The fact that they people oi the United States have been iabout icneia sLorL.y yara l ineuLO Were not would seem to indicate that; offering 'prayers of thanks in recogi- - touchdown in some seven plays. Thef there is something worth preserving L- ion of the blessings bestowed upon I unfortunate situation which seemed!; in the custom of inviting the world .them by the "giver of every good ad to have given Mr. Richardson such:, toOn the other hand there is the fra,- th.istclbrto, the day was m ace tack of real power, and one which{ triY involved. Often the crowds an official holiday, taking its place was consistently adhered to, with suc-, are greater in numbers than the mom- along with other national days gen- cess. It may be a degl'ading spectacle hers, and in the majority of cases ' orally observed by American people.1 to see a man plunge the line, but, the large part of the mob was never- In its original meaning, Thanks-j it is undeniably good football. If a; extended: an invitation to attend. The-' giving Day was a time for the official, team is to be ridiculed for plugging; sound of music is their "open recognition of the importance, of; the I away at an attack that is gaining= sesame"--=they need no more. This guiding hand of an all-seeing powrer ! yards and victory, the game of foot-!, creates an embarassing situation for in the successful completion of, a sum- ball is in a bad state. And certainly,; time hosts. They cannot evict anyone ,mer' s labors in the open fields result- Scantlebury's feat of going through 'without the risk of being 'considered? ing in a bountiful harvest. In some Michigan's line six out of seven times - inhospitable, yet their "guests" often recent years it has come to mean the Hawkeyes carried the ball on theimr conduct themselves in a manner little more than a day of "vacation," march to a touchdown is sensational wvhichi is reprehensible to the extreme, 1"a lay-off," and an excuse for whole- f enough for the most blase. involving the good name of the house sale 'gluttony.' Needless to say, the} Everything in Mr. Richardson's on the campus. Drunks are too 'prone people strayed far, from ,original communication might be overlookedi to drop around and annoy everyone meaning of the day. - in its absurdity, except the allusion I with any sense of decency and lead Yet, in spite of this tendency on to the "Santa Claus" referee. Thisj people to the inference that the fra- the part of too many people to dose- , is an unexcusable bit of poor sports- j teernity in question is _eouraging' crate the real purpose of Thanks- manship. To insinuate that an official< promiscuous drinking. ,giving Day, it is entirely possible to threw a game to another team is one t A workable remedy is hard too find, mnake it a national day of thank of-1 of the worst possible things that cani The committee of the Interfraternity ferings. There are almost innumer- be used as an alibi, even if true. And council will search in vain for a com-# able things for which the students of it pis--worse to think that a Michiganj pltely successful plan for retaining' this university, the people in the man, with Michigan's reputation for;N thie good features and eliminating the homes which they represent, the pol-II sportsmanship, could even hint that undo-lira";le practices. The remedy, itical and religious leaders of theI the referee was partial to the winners. it i' apparent, must come from a state and nation-in fact almost every ,In the first place it is not true, andI cefinite stand on the matter by the ,citizen of the United States-may be in the second place it is a low accusa- I Kenyon is prescnting Benavente's Spanish fantasy "The Bonds of Inter-- est" next Wednesday evening- in M-ill auditorium.. Following the established tradition this play also leads to the extravagant anil brilliant, lut with an added literary distinction hardly pres- ent in the other produc-tions. It will attract a, Jage audience and deserve' it. There is still a final chapter: next year on Mr. Nelson's return the plan is to present" Maeterlinck's "The Blue Bird." After this Masques must make still a further departure,, for there is no spectacle beyond Maeterlinck. DE PACH-MANN The little ofdhnan who makes Chop-- in drip like pearls, Vladimir De Pach- manna, who gently boasts that he is a little crazy, is on his farewell tour, and the statement must be taken seri- ously since lie admits an age of seven- ty-five. He i t-'o appear at 8:30 o'clock in Orchestra-- hall, Detroit, next Thursday evening, the little old raan who makes Chopin dIrip like pearls, who boasts tha t he is a little crazy...- Years ago he was forced to retire due to a mnental collapse, and now on his return so many years latter lie may not be entirely cured. About his i I. .! Tanksgivi nl Dinner, DMENU Soup 'W'iiets Best -Celer'y Wafers Roast Young Tiurkey Chestnut Dressing Tenderloin of beef Mushroonm Sauce Hubbard Squash Mashed Potatoes Cranber-ry Sherbet Rolls Dessert Home Made Mince or Pumpl Pie New England Fruit Puddi with Vanilla Sauce Brick Ice Cream Tea Coffee Milk. 129 to 2 P. M. Price, $1 Tables Reserved -tatdeli t Neionltanle-tin ic hean- in 'G tw-tre ad fv ~ n ai teet. -t ate ligtpace tate-Chi as orer.n atekink Phone 173 M)I AolilS! MI 1 . intraxc .1-61l 010 y7uutj . ;M