100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 28, 1925 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1925-11-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

P1A- 51,011 -

TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2K

1925

.sa &a. " L/ as -

1

. V

° Women of the nation werepod '" '""y:z"
,r, v when one of their sx, Mariamn A. Fer- r
=- - _-- - i tguson, waselected3 governor of r'cxas u
dgthle Unvers ity year by thet Board In lid iled xsthe one who xwould prove
Control of Student Publications.
____________________- to the nation wonian's ability to 13 FFIi
Mcl aof Western Conference Editorial hnl higher governmental affairs. 4T
_ Thinking men were, perhaps, doubitful
'he ssociated Press is exclusively en- of theC ability of Mrs. Ferguson to fill I
'k~t: d o fc u:-' forrepbliatio ofallnewsI _gil, please let me travel by car or
c 1 ~ to the ilee f o ep ito not o hall isews her olffie effectively, or, at any rake,{
ic nti paper and the local news pub-, they lookedl upon her election as the b114;i1
~yi~thes rcuitd toit ornot therwse Mont ,Moana, to Palmi
w ______________________ beginning of anl experiment..
needl t tle postoflice at Ann Arbor, Now threats are bi adle by i ets -,diMane
ci ia , assecnd class matter. Special rate leisatrstht ln kchenIpse-re ~ but my sirxit i
o ottegntdby Third Assistant Post- lgilaor tatirpI!ajjll ho
. ~wGnra.(cedings will be instituted against her
;<<:nby crrie, $3.0; b mai, lo I a,= land of the Plains-out toI
~I rpto ycare, 35;bymiif she cont mlesto a5(iil.tEir her ly~xte, ,yoniig.
(" ics± Ann Arbor Press Building, May- duties as she has:, beeni doin,,. She is
33rd btice" openly relying upon her husband,,
Phones: Editorial, X4925; business, 2214. Tame Ferguson, who was' removed Of the g lorles oY )lellipliis in h alt
-from the gubernatorialship by im-
". Ey DIO IA L STAFF pe c m nTnd ltr hh i g l Re San in Los Angeles, -4. J. is .
pec m n n ae a i e a e Teplep one 4925r right restored by an official act of'sw ll o h pt u r
EDTRhis wife, to decide important matters ' e ~ ~ r oiii
MANAGING EIO for her. {s'tret r omn
GEORGE W. DAVIS Shortly after "MaJ " Ferg uson began i'lhere :atiean is at ian-dear old
haraditorial Board. .Norman R. Thai to administer _af air s Imany felt that utWoing.
('n Eito........Rob. ert. S. Mansfield her hnsband was the real "power be-
11±oEito.......Manning Ilousewortl Ilhat'al4Tron, ie 1c ,1
Woens Edtor............Helen S. Ramsay~ hind the throne." But now \l r. Pr itl l or onlkeC ao
Ei Or .........WilliaJosephur ball
ort Edtor...........JoephKruerguson has established an eflice in the Neiak
Mscand iDrama....Robert B. Henderson capitol building and his wife is open- dette albiliglieEm
ight Editors ly submitting governmental docu- nAia.I
I'm sick of all Subways and busi.
Smt T. Cady t.ecnard C. Hall inents to him for consideration and :!l.Cob hmsV oka11SSl'111Ii oaninlg
Robrt T. DeVore W. Cavin Patterson judgment. She is charged with abid-j itthteplso-d
Irwin Olian Frederick 1r. Shillito in1y1e usads eiioso 1-Butte, Wyoming.
sues which the constitution specifical-,
Assistants I
GertudeE. Bile Magare ~aker ly states must be made by the gover- behps
T~~a 1. Bairbour Stanford N. Phelps nor alone. Rebellion against this Ii3 Ily taim
(lirle Beymer Evelyn Pratt dead 1''p~,;e MreRe rctc sbeig
Cilim]rooks MienReeorccssbewing.Fr hl)iedso er 'ebe
~innRR~e~b~umWomen may contend, now, that Mrs. Frbn eso er 'ebe
t ] 'UChape Janet Sinclair Rt i1splite cif my charts and my
Eugene11.. Gutecunst Courtlai-I C. Smith such her apparent lack of ability to
lrugasD, ubeday Stanley Steink' fill her office and show the leadership I ctfiletomng,
CayDangn (larissa TapsonI'lb atndi Ceeerfu -
anc IF. Herald Henry Thurnau which is symbolic of her position lbelaihdif'eevrfu -
S rionnKubik DavidC . Voie does not reflect npon the ability of ,te Woig
11ate . Mack Cassani A. Wilson other women. But heow will the vot-
;oi . Markus Thomas C. Winter in ulcreat il tb xfl tsy shucks!. we can't the boys next
c h Mrry Marguerite Zilszke ding;public re-act? Will it-Besibe
________sorr____enced__bythe 1F'erguson experiment .dorinlegorah abtBeie
choosinggovernorsorother inr how do you know there isn't a Butte
chosgIgvenorSoSoterhigerWin? And whatdiffernedoes
T.-leShneSSAF212cs1er4sanadtinlatr that make, was Will Rogers funny or
Telephon 21214Lion for future elections.1
I ' t lI. Jrant ZAd tbo rc i U'. c V nirl n

1< <

I

MUSIC
DRAMA

Special Offer

We will allow you $1.00 for your old fountain pen o,,thle purchase
of a new pen of any of; the following makes:

.t .... ~. W. .;... ..

T©IIGil n: - The Play Production
classes present Four Onle-Act. Plays in
University hall at S o'clock.
THlE PLAY PROiW CTION PLAYS
A review, by Kenneth Wickware.
One knew how to be grateful for the
one happy ending that camne with the
final curtain, and which helped a little
to gladden an otherwise gloomy even-
ing. Not that happy endings are es-j
sential to the highest dramatic art,I
but after three heroic administrations
of unmitigated tragedy-three plays
in which every line was charged with
the utmost of depression-even the
slightest suggestion that life is not
quite so hopeless after all, came as a
refreshing relief.
The one act play presents technical
andl artistic difficulties that are oft-
times insurmountable-even for the
best of professional companies. The
presentation of four one act plays in a
single evening constitutes an under-
taking which demands an unusual
amount of intrepidity to attempt. Such
plays are necessarily concentrated
to thle last possible degree; the lines
are packed with import; the action,
especially when presented by amateura
actors, may easily appear jerky and
lacking in unity, and as a consequenceII
the subtlties involved are sometimes
lost entirely to the audience.
Of the plays presented by Professor
Hollister's class in University Hall
last night, the most effective was "Sin-
train of Skagerrak," a dramatic
sketch by Sada Cowan; and the most
pleasing was "Pan in Pimlico," a
phantasy by Helen Simpson. As has
been suggested, the latter play, with
its breath of optimism, came as a de-'
cided relief. The former, in the pic-
turing of a man and a woman on a
moonlit cliff overlooking the sea-of
their struggle, the woman for the
affection of the muau; the man against
his love for the sea-proved tremend-
ously gripping. It succeeded in doing
what none of the other plays any more
than approached; it aroused an emo-
tional reaction on the part of the audi-
ence. The other two presentations
were "The Rescue" and "Mis' Mercy."
The stage settings for all four plays
were excellently and simply done-
especially in the case of "Sintram of
Skagerrak." Outstanding perform-j
ances were given by Doris Selleck,
Jessie Werner, Richard . Woellhaf,
Edna V. 'Hill, Mary Gndakunst, and "
the thoroughly competent Mr. Fred-
erick Jarret.
i "THlE SI A1"
(leorge Stark, dramatic critic of the
Detroit News, wrote the following re-
view of Ference Molnar's "The Swan,"
which Miss Bonstelle is to present
YMonday afternoon in the Whitney
theater at 2:15 o'clock under the au-
spices of the Ann Arbor branch of
the American Association of Universi-
ty Women:.
"The combination of Molnar's lovely
play and the complete understanding
with which Miss Bonstelle's actors
p~erformed it strikes a high note in the
field of the repertory theater. It is

PARKER
WATERMAN

SHEAFEER
CONKLIN

Gjrzta's Book Stores
At Both Ends of the Diagonal Wal..

r

d

w

Irving armohts,DB S-C'
ORTHOPEDIST
707 N. University Ave. Phone 21212
MANNI'S d I4- ME
FACTORY MADE
,"gons Skill and Quality
in Our Shop.
Save a D~ollar or More at the
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 Packard Streets. Phone 7415.
(Where D). U. It,. Stops at State fit.)

rwoa LEAS E
DON'T
MAKE
PATHS
ON THE
CAMPUS

WHY' SO BASHFUL?;
Snag a date somewhere and come around to
the dance on Saturday night. The same peppy
music as always. The floor is in excellent condi-
tion.
Tickets at
SLATER'S BOOK SHOP, and at
GOODYEAR DRUG CO., Main St.
H i s G i f t. t o m e e rmu. i
Came rom Htzel'

BUSINESS MANAGER
]3YRON W. PARKER.

is

Adetsn.......... .... J. J. Finn.
Adverisi...............r."D. Olmsted, Jr.
Adctsn...............Frank R. Dentz, Jr.
Adver11ti .................. Wm. L. Mullin
t ;rc ltion............... .:i. L. Newman
l'utdication...............Rudolph Bostelmnan
A cuints ...................Paul W. Arnold
Assistants
T,'gred M. Alving F. A. Nordquist
(;eorge it. Annable, Jr. I~oleta G. Parker
Wk Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow
1 -ha1it. obrink Robert Prentiss
V.J. ('ox Win. C. Puseli
Ma;rio;n A. Daniel Franklin J. Rauner
James R. DePuy' Joseph Ryan
Margaret L. Funk. Margaret Smith
i- n(>;Iihr Mancee Solomon
't'_ Kenneth Haven 'Thomas Sunderland
J ?:. Little Win. J. Weinman
E. Mosher

ICAMPUS OPINION
Anonymous comic~~ations will be
Idisregarded. Thie names of communi-
Icants will, however, bec regarded as
confidential upon request.
THE 'NATION I,.; WFRONG
To the Editor:

i{ FACT
There may be a town of Butte,
Wyoming, but it is not in any
jstandardl atlas. Mr. Rogers was
born on a ranch which was twelve
miles from Clairemore, Oklahoma,
and was brought up there.

k

The review of Will Rogers' painful
efforts again raises the question as to,
'Whether or not The Daily critic at-
f-~ne1gthen ,,crfarnonneg tl- 1u:lien-

Well, the B'. and G. boys have cer-
tainly found a way to keep) us students 1
off the campus.

deavors to appraise. GING
Apparently, to the pansophistic Well, Red didn't iakce any long
, nns the other tiay, 'ner did he score
critie of the cowboy clown, anyone I ocion eefffls.w . '

i

'1
5
do
re
ii

~ATUR)AY, OVEMER 28, 1925
N itb : ~ to; -i .:C)OA ]) C, H1ALL
'1 m hppyto give expression
to my igh apreciation of the
ii entlyspirit of accommuodation.
an~ cocesionwhich on. both
cisf ha racterized the recent
:eg'tans for the funding of
1tal'S debt to tile United States
a1(d iiy gratification at the mu-
I nly satisfacto ry agreement
. _i, i-'usness to Italy and in
farnssto the people of the
Mi tdSates resulted therefrom."
--Ltter from the President to the
I:ty-America society dinner in
th: Hotel Biltmore, New York, in
hnrof time Italiani Minister of
F inan:ce Count Guiseppe Volpi;
]':imbers of the Italian Debt Coin-
;111o ad the Aerican Ambas-
adrto Italy, Henry P. Fletcher.
__-M)41X TO GO
Football season is over;- three
-wesremain: before 1the Christmas
V~i~itiO .th~lese three weeks will

_;
'4
I
i
i
i
1

who has been able to hold (dewn a Toom help feeling that lie does
with the Follies must be god utit uhabdysetm
4 how "clever" is a mani gotrdeJst tschabdynpn
race lprejudice. for the boisterou3 app omhwceca' , e
IprOval of the lprovincial? t,:r-icl in theo fact th a~t
The cracker-bares o1' the nation's 'stund roboeI
four cor'ners are C szzllport ilr the h!is college (areer. It i5
skeletal frames of similar louts. TPhe } hat the p)rhnie purposet
only differenace between thzese rustic st is to train men to lbe
"wi9-ca(-ers an Ihe smrt lec whilie after graduation.
of t1, le oll;is that evenitially te ti cn, as tar as we knowx, i
county home will furnish an auidience I en uponr itself the task-
for their senile effoirts wvhile AMr. tasi C or b~raints into a vac,
Rogers will be able to retire on the It doesn't seem to us w
b~ounty of the American people as a cMoalizing for Illinois to
whole.j ball man enter that profed
IThe question as to whether or not does to have a graduate
Rogers would be so frankoly booirish gincening school become
and unmannerly if sonic of the offend- j elanic. If a man is ment
edl auditors were to sudd~enly terim!i- strueted that he pr-efers
hate his illiterate "witticismns" wvithi to an educat ion which we
somne form of physical duress is aan j }him foir any other life wei
interesting speculation. Several that Illinois, or any othe
spIeciments of his elk can testify to could make ;a Creek scholE
the fact that t'he fine edge of their , After all that Universit
sarcasms has been somewhat dulled him for his life's work, w
by that form of effectiveness, as }much as Harvard and P
Thre quartette and thle{rope were for Roosevelt and Wilsoi

snt consider
Crning.
}anything so'
tMr. Grange
he coimpletedI
is our belief
o1 a Univer-
more worth-
Noistitu-
has ever tak-
of installing
cant skull.
any more do-!
}have a foot-
ession than it
of their el-I

Pr a con m-I always unsafe in reporting activities
tr tally so n the drama to become either too
fotbl positive or too enthusiastic, but this
ouldpreareI observer is confident in saying with-'
Drk, we doubt
~r nsttuton1 out reservation that 'The. Swan' re-
er nsttutonveals an entirely new level in stock-
lar of him. production. Here we have a great
ty has fitted,
whiich is just play, acted with distinction that at
Princeton didt least approaches perfection !and pre-
1.seated from the scenic standpoint
n with exquisite taste. 1
''TUE 1 "The story of the play is more or
27, (Special I less familiar. 'The Swan' had its pre-
mre vi-in Dectro~it- with a.'ditinollishlf

G7he
Florheimhe
can take long walks
without showing
any fatigue. Stam-
ina counts-in a
shoe, as well as in
a runners
CAMPUS
BOOTERY
304 Sauth State
t$ S .N*O C t '
Id

You see, many's the time he
talk of the "adorable things

heard Her.
at Hut-

splendid, Mr. Henderson should have***
been thereIle surely would have i IIERESTING IF'
noted the poor support they were af- IOrnePkFaNv

zel's, everything a woman could want!"
so he knew just where to go. And~it was
very simple. He walked in, asked a
saleswoman's advice about that handbag
in the window, or about some dainty silk
underwear-hosiery, or a box of the
beautiful handkerchiefs, and there he
was! Ready for a wonderful Christmas
with Her.
i i t

-,

S

undoubted wly decide the collegiate fate, IICIIYtle~teono.to 1,ols)-Local officials are inve sti- -'
o.- mhn a boy and girl, es pecially in -.B, '2. atiiig the re port circulated from Ann cathaddb vaL lien.I
I ~later went to New York where it be-
th unde r classs Next February, Abr Mihgn that one Jsp
rilhor IhgaJsp came the reigning dramatic success
w lch1i really only six school weeks -______-lo had (lied there recently. Theoftosansg.Itiawrkht
and an examination period away, sev- inTRILvestigation was instigated at the istuhd whroac, elae
ThetheTwilRIAL ~TC0MVMEN T 1qe hthehsnee i ited oucthe: dycet Loancse youngt
ena! hundreds of students, mostlyreus of Joseph Zilch, prominent Ihuoan
_________________________satire, highhuoan occasionally
frwhnexill return to their homesrat ths city, who is steadfastbodcmd,
i- by request. I l !G TBRYtN 3'Aai isteofthisntthabroadscomedde.
an ls h teha i s norvtdead ~eseRyeLni s h on
The mjArborof sincell heurgraduatedYorkfromd I princess is given the first honest op-I
not, because they lacked the natural Cnie h uieetarl Aryth sAtebnir sityehegredlastedJune.
I osdrteqieetrodnr otnt h has had since joining
in ehgtce necessary to compete coduttfhreidntMtiiotewads Mi. i sedittee postveatathe Bonstelle company. She proves at.
clih hir~assmnates, but because y rIt~e ut oiieya
PmkofBy MawrtCollege. hnbro omremeighr once that she is an actress who has a
tiyalwdtelevst ecrid 'diss Parks was petitioned by the fine nmental equipnient to -abet the
awa bythewhirlpool of extra-u-tdytaliisteoypronnth
Students' Self-Covernaicut association wrdt ertenm fJeZlh natural beauty that is hers. She has
L(u~rdvrin htAnAbradIt emtsoig at Pryn Mawr 4 searched into this part and brought
colg iepeet hycudnt Iunder certain restrictions and it ndtatte eeae ms hv be out of it all that would appear to lie
dillnot execis reaon-an inipostor. Local police authorities
elatddnt xecs esn ain quarters of the college. The rea- a (nnuietngxih n ro behind it. She gives it glamor and
aldiceinith enomnofIson th"e petitioners gave -was this: that I wistfulness, pride and pathos. It is
co llee lif e. j officials to the endi that the alleged
('lleelfei dmrbe aglyb-while not all of the students wishet)JeZicbuedtreeexmed to an anibitious task, done with sincerity
smoke-in fact, less than haf of them de -nn hte rnttepeal and a fine talent.f
cas f ishappiness, and joys,- Iapaetleidwstt-nelrat- mn inc h r ot sprrevat i It is a pleasure to observe in con-
moto swudntgv hm~,smoking rule of 1897 was increasingly I_ uonelusion that Miss Boustelle has at
-a.a. gadal s ol cllge neioie Idifficult to enforce aind no longer haitl form of a fml coat of arms-box hertonx
derol o htrao.YtcleeIundergraduate senilnenr(rt behind it, -haiglank Iwte cellent standard her beautiful theater
doe hve mst have, its serious, its, ht1ld.. nsea i-s riding- ih fakdby wate eve ' The BeggrO osbc'
Otews whaty haeddx- BIk~ksaswi' id ;towvers rampant on a red field. The BegrOHosbc
Ohriewhtx-Ishe point out to thre students that G.ot i:"e aBto o ht" and and 'The Swan' are eloquent proof of
c~~'hsi o enBryn Mawr never changes? Did she is adt oefo"a nieti h this. And 'The Swan' is gladly recoin-
se~a udeso tdnsdiscover that the younger generatilon ieo n ftm oneso h ln mended to any who are in search of aI
v ortun to their homes next jIisigoing toethe tlogsundedsshe ahehclan.
I i gong o te dgsDidsheallrinTamn. , l completely satisfying performance in
b b-a ill not he returning be- that a law once written is a law for-thtear.
c-~uaethcy ave failed to be grinds, but ***
rahrJeascidslte aeIever, and that if Bryn Mawr does not Nhow hlihy te aextv listen here a nilnute. Regard- Th catinesig-to nye
rK ; ;;r('oine anything but play cos olv si ie n19 h less of what this letter says or doesn't
*u~ilg one thing to (10 is to give the college say QI LILt IfIS )EAI), And by familiar with the personnel of the
life.nmore machiner-y of enflorceement? No, golly lie is going to stay dead. conipany, is as follows:
Ais ParkIs laid' down nonie of threse BesidesT, who woultd belieeay Dr. Nicolas Agi..Donald Cameron
A~ NTEESINGEXPRIENT ox atedr jugmnts Sh smpl Ithin ,,th is said atachamber of i Georg ... .......... ..Martin Burton

L
I
i
_I
t
rl
i
. '
i
f

Main Store
Main at Liberty

Arcade Branch
Nickels Arcade

1'

I-. - is

r...;oD

.. .v .... ....... ..® ,

ii
I
i

QUALITY.,
s
v~
& Svr 4.D
44 FI~iO

.
4
,

ANNOUNCEMENT

4 QUALITY.
0I

We are ready with our Christmas toys
and gifts of all kinds. Be sure and see
our stock before you buy.
inn C;_ Iehpr HardwaIrp (7on

Y

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan