PAGE FOUYR TH1E MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESD)AY, NOVEMBEP 25, °1925 r R Pubilished every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in 4 nrlof Student Publications. Me=-es Western Conference Editorial ~ eAssociated Press is exclusively en- itle t the use for republication of all news disptches credited to it or not otherwise creitd in this paper and the local news pub- ihed therein Ent' red at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, V ishi: an, as second class matter. Special rate l p)oi;tage granted by 'Third Assistant Post- '-;itr General. Sub scription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, Ofie:Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ::rd treet. P'hones : Editorial, 4925; business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 ~MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W, DAVIS C ~'VunEditorial Board...Norman R. Thai Edt ,r........... Robert S. Mansfield \U'Editor. ..........Manning lHouseworth o.' Editor............ Helen S. Ramsay i t. ditor.............. .Joseph Kruger '1'legtalili Editor....... William Walthour vIu:i~ and Drama...Robert B Henderson Night Editors Smith H. Cady Ltxcuard C. Hall W illard B. Crosby Thomas V. Koykka htobert T. DeVore W. Calv'in Patterson Assistant City Editors tIrwin Olian Frederick 1-I. Shillito Assistants et± rude 1,. Bailey Wi:lim T. Barbour 4hrles IBehymner Bilamlreyer i,'h;in C. Brooks It. hiuckinghana t dgar Carter Carleton Cli anpe Sugene H. Gutekunst Dlouglas Doubleday Mary Dunnigan t <<,es T. Herald El~izabeth S. Kennedy Ma;rion KAubik Wler H1. Mack 1,ouiis 1R. Markus ::llis Merry t' ien Morrow Margaret Parker Stanford N. Phelps Evelyn Pratt Marie Reed Simon Rosenbaum Ruth Rosenthal Wilton A. Simpson Janet Sinclair kCourtlard C. Smith Stanley Steinkn Clarissa Tapson Henry Thurnau David C. Vokes Chandler J. Whipple Cassam A. Wilson Thomas C. Winter Marguerite Zilszke Prohibition has done a great deal of good in Ann Arbor; to declare it to be a failure beca use it has nor, abol- ished drinking altogether is por ara- soning. ,U BOSLEADERS, NOT II RECA tOil S For years men, eminent educators, '%Xt'e read sometig ii yester~ay have written and preached of thle Gmrn lu's paper wich :1ilsed usj "great transition between high school very much. It. just shows the c hild - and college," but lttl has "ever lbeen I r lvioi o npsc( e. It si ttuk done toward bridging this ap v ieul is .sso iparticularly fimy tI htwefI every student must cross. wipulicly cliikkle over it before0 At Michigan, a start has bceen made. I _ku ulcth aydtis l President Clarence Cook Little ha Iimms f h epeworead thisiI suggested to the Board of Regogent, a ,n qulya mc i in it as we did. If they dintw plan for establishing closer contact(lfW between the University and icong iiordt.1-lmt dott students; a plan which ia coiiieilte them. will investigate. The imortant ting ne of the beauties of running a (I- is the fact that at last a start has I a~tent like this is that you can say been made toward making the under Fus-t v. ht you want about aythin, no graduate's entrance into the Univers;i-j one ever says aytig to you aout r ty less difficult. To do this, the prob- it lem of proper selection of studentsta Vel, that's wasting time. anywaya must first be solved. It is this problem hIge.I hemrigppr that the President's plan attack,. iot of you probably read thais stuff) As outlined publicly by tie Presi- dent on several occasions, it is im-i portant that only the proper type ofd student be granted admiission to the IS1'PRE1SSD I University; it is equally important. that only those who are qualified e allowed to remain. It is by interv iew that the President proposes to soIol e To I'rna the first problem; to the second, the Shul 1Le .VDi. same method might hei applied. TO the man who interviews, and ti n Alt hug s soon I may le dead, recomens astuIentfor{iiI~t(*e Don't think that I shall stay so, to the University, Should be gven 'lntrsala imybd much of the responsibility for itha No matter who may say so. student's conduct in school, lit should retain, especially thiroughout But v fy soon I'll drop around, the frstyear, the contact he has cs- (S lofyllhbuid To seC wat solace you'll have tablished with a student in sofar asI that is possible. Hils should be, in a1 position approximating that o "older And whether you have married. * s y broter."I will not e the usual ghost, But, the cry arises, sonie fatculty Anton orbe aggon Wien are not qualified to,,aid and ad-. ing,t vise a student in any field other than Or clt c ,you, if the scares you that in which they themselves :are ~i- most,j1 terestedi as instructor.:;. To t hat theret And lank my cuis with mnoan- is but one answer: if a facultyr an is i jg. not qualified to act as adlvsor t an*** undergraduate, then certainly he isj Don't look for mnc at midnight then; lnot qualified to hold a posit~ion 1 inIthe (I'll keep much better hors), a facult~r.And do not dread my (oming when One real and serious objection does It thnders andl it showers. arise. Men on the faculty, especially*** those who might qualify as interview- lut sometines, near the close of 'ers, are likely to be extremely busy. (ay, However, a. 15 minute conference once W-hen cool it is, and dim, a month, oor possibly tice, and a You'll stop, and give a start, and greeting when they meet on tho (cam- { say, pus, would undoubtedly do nmch to--I- "Wha ~cm tiko i? ward preserving a closer -cntact h- *** tween faculty and students This, to And when the Autumn woods are many a studlent, would prove a spnir cold, and an inspiration for greater cfr. So still you dare not speak, Many_ suggestions have been mad; j rom out the leaden sy, a gold, many of themr are not practical; but I And falling lef will brush your at any rate, interest in the problemn is chek. evident. This start may enable Mich- -Grif. igan in time to be the first major in- Shot wafter shot rang out in the clear TILE TAXP AYER R, iEIII'liaternoon air (The Manchester Guiard ian) "I think runig' is more proper,' si Bunny shyly, to Chu my, his lit- Lord Beatty has been defendin g the eromiaefmDyCi. Admiralty with more vigour than dls-;. creton gaint wat e cals he hat mreakes you sphinx so," re- campo ai n sof ih at blfe l to pit ya eiefsht frd on BUJSINESS STAFF Telephione 21214 BUSINESS MANAGES BYRON W. PARKER. Ad(vertising.. ......... ...... ..J. Finn Avertising .. ......T.+ D. Olmsted, Jr. Advertising .............Frank R. Dentz, Jr. 1:.rertising .................Wmn. L. Mullin tCirculation............... ;. L. Newman lulication...............Rudolph Bostelin Accoun.... ......Paul W. Arnoldl t'Assistants Ingred DT. Alving F'. A. Nordquist George H. A'nnable, Jr.'ILoleta G. Parker W. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow oh n i. Bobrink Robert Prentiss 1. CoxWin. C. Pusch ;Marion A: Daniel Franklin J. Rauner i Ames R. DePuy Joseph Ryan l1argaret L. Funk Margaret Smith Stan Gilbert -, Mance Solomon Tl. Kenneth Haven Thomas Sunderland J. E. Little Win. J.. Weinman Frank E. Mosher I N AND DRAMA ALL lHE KNOQWS 1'111S AFETIIIINOON : 'The O "e an fIecitai in TIM l auditorulin at 1-15 T'O VItrII I: 11i111IRogers and the de Iie~sde Singers init 11midi orum at 8 :1. o'loeh. SIS ILVT l, IEREP * * . 'M~E ORGAN RECITAL Palmer- Christian, University organ- ist, will offer the following Organ Re- cital this afternoon in Hill auditorium at 4:15a o'clock: 1"aitasie, " We lPraise Thee, 0 Lord" '...................THuber Firast moveiment from the Sonata, "Tile Chambered INautilus".. ......... Iumphrey St ewart Aux Etoiles...........)upai-c Rondo Capricc~io).. ,..........ILemare Sonata V.................. Guihunant Adagio Chomral and Fujgue"' Scherzo..................... Rogers The Swan .............. Saint-Sacs Amneri(can Rhapsody on National Airs ..... ................. Yon I N 'T'I! E;1N E SPA Pi I- Bar're Hiill, a pupil of Theodore Harrison, leadiiig baritone of "Tam- bourine," the two succeeding Union Operas andl the (lcc Club, was oloist with the Symphoniy omchest ra of thle C'apitol Ithater in D etroit last Sunday ('harlotte rrPrnsey of the DIetroit Free Press wiole the following critic (isini of his w-ok "Farme 11111was lhcarodto adantage in the Welllknownn 'Put' from Ver- di's 'Mlasked Pll,' althoughi his style inl handling the selection was more iyric than dralnat ic. is voice is onej of remarkably g-obd quality, of un- usally high range antI his tone pro- d'uct ion has the ease and inish which indicates excellent training. A pupilC of The.odore I larrison in Ann Arbor, mainy of tile audience were familiar with his intelligent interpretations through appearances as soloist with the U'niversit y oft kicigan 01cee Club and the Michigan Union Opera.'' 'PIlS AMAVI2NG C(OMIIA- li()MBAST1o FURIOSOI In spite of Robert Ransay's excel- lent review\ of "Saint .loan,'' the day has passed -wth bust les and petticoats whe'n ou(e criticizes Shaw for his flip- p ancy, for his "love of horse play,' hi; "scathing satire." Jist >as Shake- slpeat'e inseits al maneir of slapstick burlesque, rangigfrom the ost 1ri- liant 'wit, in English literalnr- to its stupidest bulns, so Shaw tinges even Ilk' imost he(roic eroines with man- nereo law~~s ; as Shakespeareo in his age turned on ever'y hand to puriely extraneous lyric soliloquies, so Shawv inserts at heis pleasuire the fantastic interlude 0of'"lNla a and Supemman' and thle in suat ing Inquisitor- of ''Saint Joa ." It is the privilege of artists to break lb cii' o oven ition al moulds cs readily as they abide by themr. Shiaw is1 privileged to write incomparably dra- mai ragedy with ont' hand, and re- yei ,a his sentimnt Witli the farce of{ the ot h i; And it' be lakles the Joan of' tie Chur'ch and il es of her little more t lbant an ext raordinary penet rat- ing T( Iani, hltiuanizsanld glori- *is, lv'r 11l't y, rdon)in aone'? brenthI. If he c. I i(,'/tm os our loyalties in a Strmonibaergor ' Id a Wa rrick, lie is no. more than following the path of "the ElTizabethan IEnglishman in LautnceE amd .Jaimes I (of Scotlandl in Bottomn, thel Weatver. Shaw's iilmudent venloml, lil-': Shmakespeam-c's, mnust soft en with the( generationms.** ITHO CHE 1W S (tI'[p WisIISA Special Offer- We frill allow you $1.00) for your old fountx of 4a new pien of any of tile folli PARKER WATERMAN -' tai pen on tihe purchase Dwillg maikes: SHEAFF'ER CONKLIN At Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk. MAKE FACTORY MADE Neans Skill and Quality ill Our Shop. Save a Dollar or Nore at the FACTORY HAT STORE _ATw GRANGE'5 FROM ( w _ 301EAs-,t LIberty Street ShadetsDap aerisBandSopandesorie _ ,° 617 IPackarni Street (Where D.I. .R. Stops FPhone 7411. at State St,)I 1 ;, PLEASE DON'T ON THE CAMUS I i I r -1 'V EDNESDAY,_ NOVEMBER 25, 1925 Night Editor--SMITH H. CADY, JTR.1 "It is one thing to frame a law and quite another thing to operate under it," said Senator Moses, New 1Twj)§i4r'e, before: the Amier-' 'icm in:Institute of Steel Construie tiozn ~It White Sulphur Springs, V,' Va. H-e cited, as a concrete o~Tuletaxn legislation of such a natul'e.that, an expert has to be sent frtomi-he~ Treasury to the k.apitol to help senators and 'rep- rcsentativ'es prepare their income tax returns. -i I If economy means anything to you at all you'll e nj oy Arcade foods, for they're t~zlowest priced in town. Finest too, patrons tell us. D-TCHEASE OR D)ECREASE Drunkenness was as prevalent it 1924 as in 1914, according to figure: compiled by the Moderation league o7 America, based on surveys of police epa)rtment arrests in all cities of ec than 5,000 population. At the :nm time, Dr. Ernest H. Cherrington. general secretary of the World League Against Alcoholism, declares that such figures mean nothing, duo to the change in enforcement stand- ards wrought by the Volstead act. It seems that figures can lie, aftern alfor it is quite obvious that where- ithe pre-Volstead days, a man vowas drunk was not arrested un- 1-s.11s conduct was disorderly, he is i~'vArrested simply for being intoxi- (itdor for selling or even giving awyalcoholic beverage. Conditions 1 .::, vary in different sections of the c,: tntm'y, but1 it is incontrovertibly t.'ue tha t Ann Arbor and the Universi- ty ve re much "dryer" in 1924 than thyvere in 1914. The condition is sllfar from being "bone dry," and igtwell be improved, particularly by a change of the lax attitude of the t;ub'l c on the liquor question, but it i-3 a great improvement over the old (Jaysr[, -when a Michigan footbl~al victory as cehb'aed in numerous ways that wer hadlynoticeable Saturday Thle _Mode ration league, which in- eludes on .'s roster such names as J ?ih Ioot, Rerniit Roosevelt, P't. Rev. Chale Fikand Newcombi Carlton, 15oposu to bone dr'y prohiibition, xand its survey of time situation is from a pa.~rian standpoint. The fact that mo,_re arrests for drunkenness were made in 1924 than in 1914 does not 5rovet hat there wer-c not more peo- pl' w zho could have been arrested than n s f I e'be sore because thle Admra:1lty, wli ieh I I AmOkip*there~"cidCum ,f recently succeeded in forcing upon the sddely e Government amid Parliament a p)r0- Bnyloe p uti iet I, gramme of naval buiidin:, W1,101 wiltla l ih fteirttme oos cost £58,000,000 within tihe next few ICacsihofteirtheewd. s years, has found talce hunmble taxilayci'I ea little sceptical about the vail e of his 'I~' mio 'uuyectdy share in the bar'gain. Imel(, r il ~~ia Bangk,! red bpn xitdy man knows that1,58,000,000 is a jot (of I "t(r ostota. r oe-agoCd(ldea" I"tha goe thes 0r in.' moe-ai- I LIt he Chunmmy was right . A 'pfi' stance, than the Governm ent sed f m-m-i lc ii55\a u Ieach year on education or o nmI -nng aI Lt he t a c tross thee dilagomnal1. Ai the Post Office,-bhut hie tuisstne('- I I solita:ry driver was, at thme ljaumu.i' ficulty in grasping what !Loit._h i ytt ' is giving him in return. euity ewr pol m Ilewgn.Ilig F, tim diort initheir eyes... is willing to ipay for.,itiut 1,is8ht Tli'Si x Ss~mey 'gse Ysistent notion, whiichl Lor(JLa {mm> r' ik h hdmdvr nl ('all "amamteur'ish,' ibm lie Pld oo oes kiee by out' of the horses anti rdeal for it in the Great. Wai' and in Im'ws1>iregg 1inlg to r ='.;a ii his breath. stinking of thme only feeot u -i men- ' fiat are they doming?' aslked Bun- i aced us. But a Iparetl: 1.e is not toiyiovdbtiesg. open hils mouth, exce(pt to) swillmv i iitintiig," rehplied FmedI simply . gratefully what Lordol eat ty cdmoo0 SeIBt osh'ttii ysfsee totl drop in. Anything ebyswfysoene to dop i. 1inytling y wa , 111)01ipo the driver who seemedl to bear3 monstr-ance is rebuked wit igibe:.,ttp well tinder thle punshmnt. his m at uris nes an Ia 'k If iii"O il' h look!'' cried ('I u in y ;suddenly mation. Evenii bis patriotis ( 1 tls' might have been coIN tnt ith eit Jiny lolked clIosely and sure haridsonmo vi(ct ory o,,-(,' C I m i noethowere alie Sphinxmites. and I : ('~il030istsin ho ( ve ue ' ey ;seemeiid to be excited. All waved I not to imentPion the '^limmiss w' I lmv, hong ednpaddles. of Cmmon. Bt, i1)P~~ml Lv he t Sudenly they began to paddle payer is expmectedl to bwnmis e- lsea 'y erently beforeo its decisionas. isfal,--lioph trembling forms on the tion is to pay, nort to (li('t iou 1( wgn it seemed as if they would I I wisdlomof his bttL's orohe::I inv ia t wants his mneuy, but he wnts aIf l:>a. r0t'''1,heywill inever make it," shouted cheerful giver. Most people, how- (lrmyectdy ever, do not grow moree, ef- orI"Oh, tihey'll mlalt e it all right,'' said being lectured at. Anid in any case it -Iul ikn hrug i er ao is Lord Bcatty's b snes to tt'7 m m ___ " _Irl--. - r...,,.,_ --. ! a .f 1 1 1 Argade Cafeteria Up-stairs; Nickels Arcade - --- 1 ANN ARBOR SAVINGS BANK 101 N. MAIN --i ANN ARBOR, MICH. - 707 N. UNIV. DO YOU LACK MONEY TO BUY SOME- THING YOU WANT? WHY NOT BEGIN TO MAKE IT POSSIBLE FOR YOU TO ACQUIRE IT? START A SAVINGS ACCOUNT. ALMOST BEFORE YOU KNOW IT, IT HAS GROWN TO SUFFICIENT SIZE TO MAKE POSSIBLE, THE fI REALIZATION OF YOUR WISH. THIS BANK WILL HELP YOU IF YOU ARE IN EARNEST. rNIDUXrT A TOT A01"'rT INT'T A 'VfT T'TL-lr-frrT7T1