THE WEATHER COLDER; PROBABLY SNOW TOD)AY t Itan ~Iaikg IMEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS I VOL. XXXV. No. 66 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1.0, 1924 ETIHT PAGES PRICE, rIVE CENTS NOTED RECITALIST IMuscle Shoals THREE STUDENTS I NIHPIT SMTH Discussion To INERRESSIT~ End this Week~ EEV HONORS I he Aluseli Shoalsquestion moved I U' 9 SH~ sow~ly today tow ards fial settlementI '- I ~as the senate disposed ofa nme SUBISTITU7TES "TURN 'l 0 rj fl :O~amendments to the Underwood bill. I IIII?, DA I)ADSON, ANT) ARE.S RIGHT" FORl SCIIEDULEI) Ever-y amendment which Senator W UN HONORS IN JAFFA ;FLAYI Underwood opp~osed was defeated and CONTEST those he favored were adopted with- SHOWVS VERSATILIl Y I!out a record vote. Opponents of the INITIATES PLAN I measurea as well as its supporters_____ Treats 'M1oral Reformiationi of Three Iooke(1 OOffthedvotysPonlthetamend- Hardened Woridlngs Through. ;mentu as t test on2 the bill, whlichis wrs Ourd h ubwloi regarded as certain to pass. Boards to Eneonarge High iMother's Influenice Scoasi _________ Although senate 1loaders are exert- Slilshp Edwin M. Whitney, dramatist and} ing pressure to prevent p~rolongation recitalist, substituting Winchell ofti (ICUS , they do not expect ° rz n th coasi Smih'stwlve chaacer omeyto reach a final vote until the last awards for students workcing on publ- "Turn to the Right," for the play, iI part of the week. If debate gets out hicatioins has been given to John F. Wtalked Jimmy," which had previous- f oud the leadersi' plan to seek an ;Iluber, '25, by the Board in Control ly been announced as the play on the agreement to limit 'discussion of evening's program won the applause 'amendmen ts t10 five mnuites for each ~SuetPbiain.iue vl ;,. sentor. ;receive $250 as wvinnler, while Hlalsey of a large audience last night in 1Ili]iseatr auditoriumn. Several senators are prepared to Davidson, '25r, and Edg, arH.Aes The play describes the adventures (5isuss the issues, at length. Chair- '27L , as second and third place win-I of three men who had been following Ili2iNorris of the senate agricultuirail I ners, will receive $150 and $100 re- the wrong road and finally, through ;committee who is vigorously olposed spe(tively. the influence of a mother's leading to the Underwood bill, said today heI These awards were inaugurated light, found themselves on the "Turn would analyze the measure in ra last year to encourage high scholar- to the -Right." The transformationspehadeirtdtatepob ship among members of the staffs of taking place in the men is especial-j ably would introduce a new bill in! capu publications, with the require- i ly emphasized in the characters Gil- mera tnamendmenkUI UICIUIL~t. mnt that each alildicanzt for the lie land Muggs, two crooks of the big Two( amendments to the Underwood prizes show satisfactory participation city, whose hearts were penetrated bill were passedi by the senate with- in hsis activity for a period of at least and who were changed into men of out a record vote. One was introducedI four semest ers. All of the grades re- honor through the mother's influence, by Senator MVcKellar, Democrat, Teni- ceived by the student (luring that These pants were interpreted in a re- i nessee which provided that the leasee .1 period are considered, and the* gen- nmarkable manner by Mr. Whitney. of Muscle hoals mus.t be eith er an o, ral standing is computed by a stand- The prologue of the play introduces American citizen or an American con- ;ard system. the audience to Joe Bascom, known trolled corporation. The other was The standings of the three winners to the underworld as Pete Turner, who; introduced by Senator Glass, Demro-; were close, a margin of one point de- has just completed) a term at SinL-* crat, Virginia, which struck out of !tiding two of the places. The major- Sing prison.- In the pawn shop, where the bill the requirement that fundl~s ity of the 14 students competing he exchanges his clothes, he mneets of the operating 'corporation should showed a scholarship standing lying two old friends to whom hie explains be0 placed in federal reserve banks. ! betwveen "A" and "B." his resolution to "TrIn to the Right,' I )ubier, winner of first place, was a from which incident tihe play takes 3 inn 1111T member of the editoriir staff of its name. A; I1 p f Chimes for the required period, while dlo bythe pvetsere reer, wheldl U bV IL[[T LKI~ Aonl of the patserreaermely weld Ii Davidson has ibeen active on thte edi- the attention of his audience stealdfast 'a a n rntorial staff of Gargoyle for four from tartto fnish Mr.Whit~ I 4 111 LL llYyears, andI is the present managing ability to change from character toL IU I Vi editor. Ailes was a night editor on character without any loss of efi et the editorial staff of The Daily last was plerhaps the most striking part of I i'1 h I1',i~ r 3azzieYear, andI had b~een a member of the then41ar] program.l L.orA. 0. Wul;al~ci staff for the lpreceding two years. ____________________It is the intention of the Boar d in AddesesI Control of Student Publications to - presen1t scholar ship awards annually, M91IN O 1110BYNOTE D TRAVE ER ;under the same conditions which flfP~lflif govern tile present contest. The WIN KS PrSTiru Etv Paul l lanzshard, '14, of New York,! names announcedl yesterday mark the _______ atho an leturr, illgive two adl-( since the formation of the plan. Contrary to exp~ectations, warnings dresses here FridM v. One will be a I In order to enter the contest, the to students in the literary college p~opular lecture en the subject "The applicant must file his urizne, record who have failed to do satisfactory Challenge of Labor to the College Stu-; on the pul lications, his grades dur- work during the first half of the semeterhav no ye ben snt utdent." This will be given in the Nat- i ng particip~ation, andI recoulmenda- semstr hveno ye bensen qttions from adequate authorities and it is expectedl that they will be ural Science auditorium at 4:15 Teri-; showing that his work has been sat- delayed until tomorrow. d cay afternoon. Another, on the sub- isfizctory. All facts are carefully Some departments were late iJett "Probjlems of the Labor Orga- Echecked lby the Board, and the stand- sending in their midsemnester reports ie ~ .Blnhr il eie e ings calculated thberef rome. which has hindered the work of the niteMrBlnhrdwll___l____bc assistant dean's office for several for'e Prof. C. L. Goodrich's class i ,. a ns I in nt m n r finj 1 i h . . . . i R . F S i i i i KOC H DSRIE Inlander Appears On Campus PEET PERILSCO RIP TheToday In Place Of Whimsies MIMES PHOSN6 111 [RIL Of ~ir TheIn lander, in a cover of gray I Five issues of The Inlander are to S EC 0NO SH W N and~ red, makes its return to the cam- be published during the University' N pus today. Sale of its first issue for year. Th policy of The Inlander, the THROUGH ARCTIC~ the year will begin on the camus and editors announce, will be confined to I Ui A NVI ILI { the bookstores at noon, it was an- i the collection of student writing,- !--nucdlsnih.TeIlne u-iroevesodrmadaDANISH EXPLORERI RELATES IN-. ceeds Whimsies, campus literary mag- j lication of tiat showing the geatest DONADI L. SNYFER, 25, WRITES ('IDEiNTS OF TRIP I azine, published during the last four I merit. It is probable that one of the I STORY OF "TICKLED TO IN GREENLAND( years later issues will 1)e given over entire- DEATH" I Whimsies was established so0on aft- ly to0 either drama or vere, and that I ILLUSTRATES TALK Ier the former Inlander, imerested a prize will le offered for the mate- L A E E .1 _ chiefly in student writing, had been ral adjudged best in this special Slde tryPrt d4iirar s.continued' because of lack of sup- nunbrofteDcmberi-So ilVst iMdl etr SlegesCary art o