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October 27, 1925 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1925-10-27

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PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

yN1ni T4 T]/NA_ a fLI y1AA VI AX \,.sy yl \ A./1 f au
wr e... -.-

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1925

Publshedevery mnoring except Monday
during the University year by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
Members of Western Conference Editorial
Association.
As eAssociated Press is exclusively en-
titled 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.-
hntered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate
of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-
master General.t
Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail,
$4.00.
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May-
nardI Street.
Phones:Editorial, 4925; business, 21214.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR
.GEORGE W. DAVIS
Chairman, Editorial Board... Norman R. Thal
City Editor...........Robert S. Mansfield
N'ews-ditor ...........Manning Houseworth
\Voiueu's 1?jitor...........helen S. Ramsay
Sports l6dito............. Joseph Kruger
Telegraph Editor..........William Walthour
Music and Drama...Robert B. Henderson
Nigt Editors
Smith H:. Cady Lenard C. Hall
Willard B. Crosby Thoas V. Koykka
Robert T. cVore W ,V.Calvin 4 nattersoa
Assistant City Editoi
Irwin Olian Frederick 1. Shillito1
AssistantsI
Gertrude i. +By Stanford N. Phelps
Charles 1*hyr ei i velyn Pratt
Philip C.-,,,looks Marie Reed
L. Farnt Simon Rosenbaum
kihm Ruth Rosenthal
Edgar Car i Wilton A. Simpson
Eugene i. Gutekunst Janet Sinclair
Douglas Doubt 4y Courtland C. Smith
Mary Itunigan James A. Sprow
ame"s T. Herald Stanley Steinko
7{Iizal)cth S. Knedy Clarissa Tapson
Marion Kiibik Henry Thurnau
Walter . Mack David C. Vokes
Louis R. Markus Chndler J. Whipple
Ellis Merry (assam A. Wilson
Helen Morow Thomas C. Winter
Margaret Parker Marguerite Zilske
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 21214
BUSINESS MANAGER
BYRON W. PARKER
Advertising................... J. . Finn
Advertising.............T. D. Olmsted, Jr.
Advertising..............Frank R. Dentz, Jr.
Advertising..................Wm. L. Mullin
Circulation...................H. L. Newman
Publication...............Rudolph Bostelman
Accounts....................Paul W. Arnold
Assistants
Ingred M. Alving S. I. Pardee
George 1I. Annable, Jr Lolcta G. Parker
W. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow
John 11. Bobrink Robert Prentiss
Elden W. Butzbach Win. C. Pusch
W. J. Cox Franklin J. Rauner
Marion A. Daniel Joseph Ryan
James R Dekuyk argaret Smith
Margaret L. Funk Ruth A. Sorge
sta Gilbert TIve hoias S nderland
S T. Keneth hlaven W . I. Weane
J. E. Little Eugene Weinberg
Frank 1. Mosher Win. J. Weinman
F. A. Norduist
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1925
Night Editor-THOMAS V. KOYKKA
NOW WE SHALL SEE
Directly following the signing of the
Locarno Security pacts, which signing
may, in a sense, be considered as a
victory for the League of Nations,
comes the Bulgarian-Greek trouble.
This outbreak, which in the old days
would probably have been considered
as "another Balkan squabble," only to
be more or less ignored, is at this time
assuming very definite proportions in
an international light; it may prove
to be the supreme test of that body
whose chief purpose is avowedly the
prevention of international conflicts,-
the League of Nations.
The articles of the League provide
that all disputes between member
states shall be presented to the coun-
cil for arbitration and settlement.
Both Bulgaria and Greece are mem-
bers of the League. Greece, while
verbally accepting the orders of offi-
cials to withdraw her troops from
Bulgarian territory, has not done so,
and for apparently good reasons.
The League council, hastily called
togeher, is now "taking up" the mat-
ter. The world, and especially ,the1
United States, is watching the coun-
cil, waiting for a decision, and the
action or lack of action which must

follow. The world, and especially the
United States, remembers the recent
conflict between the greatest powers
on earth,--and wonders.
Will the League of Nations be able
to quickly -and quietly smother this
"Balkan squabble?" We wonder.
AND AT THE END OF THE ROAII
Twenty years ago a postcard was4
mailed in Jamaica, British West In-
dies. Last week that postcard reach-]
ed Rochester, N. Y. Both the persona
to whom the card was addressed and
the sec=r have been dead for some
time. After traveling from city to cityd
for a score of years, the card has fail-1
ed to accomplish its objective.I
Thirty-six years ago a man startedt
out in search of buried treasure,
Sreasu:re that L. felt certain he couldF
locate and recover. A few days agoc
that man was found, insane and dying,
his long quest unavailing.c
lotI of the above are true, andf
were clipped from the press dispatch-y
es of the past week. And such exam-c
,ales are not hard to find. True, theI
circumstances in these two cases(
vero rnusua 1, but fundamentally these t
tragedies are being enacted daily byc
people all over the world. Daily g
hundreds of people are dedicating f
their lives to the same type of fool- h

[our application of those gifts, are
ruining cur eyesight rather than step
closer and see how fallacious our
ways?
For every man there is a goal in
life, it but remains for him to seek it
out. And the real goal is not that
which first appears on the horizon, it
is not the horizontal bar at the end of
the field,-of what avail a goal if it
were so easily found.
This matter of finding the right
goal is of especial importance to the
college man Every attempt is made
to guide him toward his chosen goal,
-but the problem of choosing that
goal still remains for the individual.
When the football man crosses the1
goal line he has only begun the
journey toward his ultimate goal, but
he has gone farther along the way
than the man who has merely decided
to dedicate his life to this or to that
without investigating the hardships
that lie along the road to that goal, or
the depth of the goal itself.
Selecting a goal is a serious step,
it is better to spend a year at the
choosing than twenty or thirty-six
years working for an objective that
is hollow. To achieve is not neces-
sarily to be satisfied with that achieve-
ment. It may take a long time to1
achieve the goal you have selected;
will you be satisfied when you arrive?
CAMPUS OPINION
Aionymous communiations will be
disregarded. The names of commu-
;ants will, however, be regarded as
confidetial uon request.
THE LEADERS AND THE BEST
To the Editor:I
Michigan has a football team this
year of which she can justly be Proud.
It has developed from a mediocre
team into one of the best aggregations
in the country. That is the team,
now what are the stu'dents that it rep-
resents doing to support such a
team?
Going to the games? Well, that is
one way--but if the students did not
go, there are hundreds of other peo-
ple clamoring for their seats. The
only other way is by cheering, not in-
dividual cheering but by organized
cheering and plenty of that. Good
cheering makes the players feel as
though the grueling fight they are go-
ing through was being appreciated.
Are we, then, supporting our team
as we should? One would judge not.
The cheerleading this year has been
as dull and monotonous as the lead-
ers' uniforms, and consequently, the
cheering has been ragged and inef-
fectual.
The Student council this year want-
ed to do something the minute school,
started so that the students would re-
alize they were on the job, and early
in the season the only thing to pick
on was the cheering. Instead of de-
veloping and perfecting the system
started last year, they discarded
everything from last year but the
cheering section. Now what has hap-
pened?
At the Michigan State game there
were three green and white flashes,
working together like machines, that
brought thunders of yells from a
1 group of the visitors in the north
stand. While on the south side of the
field, three men, plainly dressed in
white, sat motionless on the bench
while one man lead a few cheers that
caused someone in the north stand to
yell "Louder please."
Anyone who went to Urbana last
week can easily see that our cheering
at its best cannot compare with the1
Illinois cheering.
The council abolished the uniforms
used last year because they were too
gaudy, as if a football game were ar

place for sombre colors. That gaudi-
ness has always typified the college1
spirit. Why not change the schoolt
colors to black and brown, the present1
colors are rather loud even if they
are pretty. Now we have, quietly
dressed cheerleaders and the new
cheering system, if there is one, is
just as colorless as the leaders' uni-
forms.
Last Saturday, the Illini cheerlead-
er dressed from head to foot in bright
orange, led cheers in front of a bril-
liant orange cheering section. TooE
much color? One would not think so;
after hearing the gasps of admirationr
as this well organized group started
cheering that lasted almost contin-
uously throughout the gamne. Our
block "M" could not compare with
their block "I."
The yellow and blue yell mastersI
might well learn from that boy ina
orange. He had a diversity of short,b
snappy yells, and he would get onee
completed with plenty of volume be-
fore the next play started. Michigan's
yells were started slowly and carried
out slowly in a spiritless fashion f
about three plays too late,-and they '
had only two yells to work with. In-

AND ED AN
SMALL DRAMA
MATTERS
So overwrought was this noble pa- 11SANNAI'
per at the recent victory over Mr.
Grange and his cohorts, that it pas- The first of a series of monthly art-
sionately announced the joyous news icles by Max Ewing on the New York
in this manner: theater and its personalities will ap-
ILLINOIS CRUSHEI.D 3-0. pear in the Music and Drama page of1
It is far from the policy of this de- the Second Section-they call it
partment to discredit the work of Chimes-this Sunday, November 1.
what is unquestionably conceded to Max Ewing was formerly music editor!
be the world's best college daily, but of the Sunday Magazine at its prime,
we must confess that the above head is now studying in New York with
was slightly overstating the facts. Silotti, and is, quite patently, Mich-
What, for instance, would they say igan's off-chance to genuis. The first
should we defeat the Navy 42-0? article is on Noel Coward and his
* * comedies, and with all modesty is the
THE XERY LATESST VERSE OF THE ; finest piece of writing since the hal-
YELLOW AN) THE BL' l cyon days of the unmentionables.
Here's to the weather that drips s E
from the sky, "'NUGHY CIN DEREILA"
And here's to the slop and the goo!
to the rain drop that lights A review, by Kenneth Wickware.
rn the ee os It must be borne in mind that none
Thattormerly was brimming with {of the things which happen in this
blue; romantic song-farce could have hap-
pened at all if the action had not
Get slickers, rubbers, umbrellas, taken place in Paris, and at the Lido,
and coats,
Yo sand ax a s e in Venice; if the book had not been
tYou autos and taxis, and sometimes
adapted from the French of Rena
boats!
Hail! Peter and Henri Falk by Mr. Avery
(Also thunder, lightning, rain, Hopwood; and. most important of all,
snow, unsettled ani continued if Miss Irene Bordoni had not herself
s-nownunsettleghaydCcontinued
cold, with showers in the south- been the Naughty Cinderella.
The audience, at the play's premiere
Here's to the weather that drips in Detroit last Sunday night, was
f t squite evidently delighted at the sig-
from the sky,
And here's to the slop and the goo!
-Poo Bob.
* * *
There seems to have been a terri-
ble mistake made. Mr. Zilch's name
does not appear in the Student Di-
rectory.
* * *
You see what happens when these'
European countries get so promiscu-,
ous about peace treaties. Just after
the Greeks and the Bulgarians decide
to have one, they celebrate by means
of the hottest battle of the war.
We don't often become so deeply in-
terested in current events, especially I
wars, but this one is about the first
that we know of that really has good
comedy.
* * *
Another interesting feature of Avery I opwcod
j Michigan football is that you never
can tell who's going to star in the nificant and decisive step which was
next game. there manifest in the art of "slick
* * , farceur," Mr. Hopwood-namely, that
From the contributions we have re- the bedroom farce has gone abroad-
ceived lately (unpublished) it would with highly interesting results.
IThere wre three unoubtedly love-
seem that this "Twenty Five Years
Ago in Rolls" idea was all the rage. ly songs announced on the program,
* i w which were to be introduced by Miss
REALEIGH! Bordoni during the course of the
Heigh-ho sir Raleigh play; but owing to a severe cold, she
Who followed the seigh was unable to sing any of them, and
the musical part of the program was
ntnerse andeiglilimited to a few off-stage melodies,
mannes ad nhegh zcharmingly renderd by the orchestra.
fSpread his cloak in the ooze
(A damn clever rooze) Gerald Gray, a young English writer
For Elizabeth chooze her gallant living in Paris, has fallen in love with
for a croozoIta married woman. Claire Fenton.
He set sail in a Barque They are suspected by her husband,
(An impossible arque) and in consequence conspire to ar-
(Ange impossible rioaLdoei
As a good many people made the range a meeting at tne Lido, in
Venice. Mr. and Mrs. Fenton have
remnarque
Bu their pique already planned to go to the Lido to-
Whenu the st-sei ke sique gether, while Gerald is to follow them
Returned one fine wique with a pipe in the company of some "tired little
uned i fiquegirl who needs a rest," hired for the
inl his chique!
-Butiny. purpose, but strictly for appearances
* * * only-to deceive the jealous husband.
Rollo is a very good boy lately (we The workings of the plot are devious
b~b s aver god bo laely(weand not espeially important, but it
hope he doesn't see this) and so we
have rewarded him by renting him a is finally evolved that Germaine Le-
ehome. It has a concrete floor, sliding verrier, in the person of Miss Bordoni,
hom. I ha a onceteflor, lidngexchanges places and names with 0one
door, electric light, and a great deal xchugsle and sfmes tthe
more (the rhyme is unintentional, we Chouchou Rousele, and so flies to the
r A- '

assure you) so he ought to be quite Lito in Geralds company.
happy, lie also has a big friendly At the Lido, Chouchou and Gerald
eo calledl "Daegon" in the same occupy adjoining rooms, effectively
house, so neither of them are lonely supplying the farcial element at which
~ihts Mr. Hopwood is so ,adroit. There are
Thee's only one thing wrong now. two exotically gorgeous sets, exquisite
Apparently Rollo, who has had to gowns for Miss Bordoni, and an end-
Stare at the same blank wall for all less succession of utterly hilarious
situations. Miss Bordoni's French ac-
these nights, has taken a violent dis-
like to it. Every time he comes home ecn and vivacity supply the major
he exhibits a wild passion to smite part of the evening's entertainment,
said wall an awful blow. Thus far though the supporting cast is excel-
we have succeeded in disuading him lent in every respect. Henry Kendall
gives a splendid interpretation of
every time, but sooner or later, we
fear he will.--And it'll serve him Gerald Gray, wearing his clothes ad-
ferhewill.h Ad it' e nmirably and looking much like
right when le does! Georges Carpentier; and then there is
%1LCH SLt1:PS O Bunny Banton, and an American pug,
Ann Arbor, Mich., Oct. 26.-(Sp;cial,the "Pittsburgh Polecat," who provide
Ann sAror,) iundulerated merriment.
andi so forth)
Dean Joseph Zilch, nationally Again-it must be borne in mind
known criminal lawyer, is still sound that the play is thoroughly continen-
asleep at his home here. Doctors say tal in its point of view and in its
aslep a hi hoehre.Docorssayhuimor, which is bread at times, but
he will certainly be fit for the Confer-
always compelling. And the play is
once of the Deans on Wednesd,ay. mc oeta eebdro
* * *; chtmretha samere bed-room
An iteriew with Dr. Joepe is something deeper
Zilch will aippear in any issue Iabout it, something which makes us a
part of the same devil-may-core, for-
i * * lorn existence that we see being acted
on thesa
Funds aire accumulating rapid~ly for stg before us.

Personal Christmas Cards-
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BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK

SKILLED REPAIRING

Exchange that Misfit Pen for a
The Pen of the Past--The Pen of the Present--The Pen of the Future
We wilx make you a good allowance.
The "Rider Masterpen" made by J. G. Rider Pen Co.
Ann Arbor, Mich., is in a class by itself-nothing like it or
to co'mpare with it.
If there is such a thing as a "non-breakable" the "Mas-
terpen" is that pen and it holds a whole barrelful of ink
(280 drops). Fitted and serviced by Rider himself at

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RIDER'S PEN SHOP
Pen pecilist

302 State,

Irving arnis,D SC
707 N. Uversi~ty Ave. IPhone 121

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24 HOUR SERVICE f
GRANGER'S
TOMORROW NIGHT
And every
Wednesday, 8-10
Friday, 9-1
Saturday, 9-12
Jack Scott's Club Royal
Ten Piece Orchestra
Tickets at Slater's Book Shop
and at Goodyear Drug Store on Main St.

LET'S GOI
FOR A
NEW HAT!
We make the best quality hats in
the city-to order and all styles.!
Bring in your ld hats and have
them cleaned and blocked - made
into new!
Save a Dollar or More at the
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 Packard Street, Phone 74115.1
(Where D. . R. Shops at State St.)j

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"Stylc Is of Paramount Importance."

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in the world
degrees Superlative in quality,
the world-famous
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give best service and
longest wear.
Buy Plain ends, per doz. $1.00
Rubber ends, per doz. 1.20
a eIt all dealers
n American Lead Pencil Co.
Uozefl 220 Fifth Ave., N.Y.

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OVERCOATS:

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Why are our coats and suits sell-
ing so well this year? Because we
carry the things the students want
and at the right price.
Come in and look over our line of
coats and suits. We have just what
you need.

terest in the cheer was JSt rtinMO CeX the Rolls' gallery. In view 0f tie
citement of the game. No crowd is number of checks we have received, THE ORGAN RECITAL
going to cease watching a game for ! we feel that honesty forces us to state Palmer Christian, University or-
five minutes while a cheerleader that this does not mean that all col- ganist, will present the following Or-
leisurely gets under way. nmnist mnst a nresent will he gan Recital tomorrow afternoon at

Under New
Management
Our Slogan--
Quality and' Service
at Longet Pricese

A good line of furnishings
reed.

car-

"Dress Well and Succeed."

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