~PA~ FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THUtRSDAY, OCTOER 28, 1926 Ai ('j Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated PFs is exclusively en-[ titled to the use for republication of all news1 dispatches credited to it or not otherwise c- -itedtin this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor, 1Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate o£ .tase sgranted s by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription 'by carrier, $3.75; by mail, ):'I"-,. Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones:tEditorial, 4925; business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR SMITH H. CADY, JR. Editor'...... ....W.Calvin Patterson City Editor...........rwin A. Olian Frederick Shillito' News Editors.... . hlpC rooBs omen's Editor. .. ..Marion Kubik Sports Editor ........Wilton A. Simpson TegraliEdtor...... ...Morris Zwer fin; Music and Drama. .......Vincent C. Wall, Jr. -Night Editors, ~ . C.harles IBehymuet Carl o'niChaiupe Jo Chaimberlin Assista Marion Anderson Alex Bochnowski Jean ampbell MfarvnJ.Cohn Windsor IDavies Ci_;r('3 e I dlsoo) S EllisMerry Stanford N. Phelps Courtland C. Smith Crssam A. Wilson ant City Editors Carl Burger Reporters G. Thomas McKean Adeline O'Brien Kenneth Patrick Morris Quinn Sylvia Stone Jamies Sheehan' Hem y Thurnau W'~illiam Thurnau \llurd Vantik erbert edder ri ill xWeller. C wee t I I,; 4 A 4 d "t j ' 4 s tW 1 f { d -S lRUSL, SS STAFF Tel ne 21214 SS MANAGER THOMA S 1. OLMSTED, JR. Paul W. Ainold A+S, ' .n . ... ..iVilian C. Pusc . . ..hoa Sunderland Ad c x George H. Annable, Jr. Cm '''Utc~...............T. Kenneth Haven Pu hation . .. .John H. Bobrink ..Francis A. Norquist Assistants C , 1 ' Alt,. Jr. T. T. Greil Jr D M. Brown A. M. 'Hinley M. 1. Cain E. L. Hulse Harvey Carl S. Kerbaury' Dorothy Carpenter R. A. Meyer Marion Daniels H. W. Rosenblum THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1926 Night Editor-JAMES T. HERALD THE LEAGUE TO DEFRAUD Pe rcent decision of the State Supremi(Court in regard to Michi- gan's law prohibiting the publication of olds on athletic contests again bIin So t1e fore the ot-mooted ques lou of race ,track gambling inMichi- gan. it is true, to be sure, that the evil has been practically done away with in the state; but still thousands cross the Detroit River every summer, for the purpose of beating the pari-mutuel machines on the races. In the great mechanical age in which we live, Americans have acquir- ed a great deal of respect for machin- ery in every other line, it seems. They trust their lives behind a gasoline engine, and they step into elevators and rise ten or a dozen floors without a quIam. It is truly an anomaly, then, hat they refuse to believe that the :4' :'W44 8.1fl machine at the race track iin o:aten-for it is as me- 8h1 n":y - ,;.iild as any machine can La d j ator is as sure of his u :;uz a 'investor in stadium bonds-except that he does not have to ait as long, and his returns are larger. It may Abe only the weaker willed u *' tI a Ueud to be protected tormt1 eil; it. may be a perverted so7 f ' got:sm that moves men to d efymechaical certainties; whatever it i:, no means should be overlooked in wiping out the tendency as com- pletely'and as ,quickly as possible. It is 2l( ,' h,: lb i''ecision of Michi- gan's; court does .not seriously affect the law ains .publication of odds, which:is one of the most effective way s to siamp out betting, for the de- t:> ; the publication t# eUi Y AC i vent is over, and a '' be made then If th remainder of the law-that ; ;,1ll "o ni"3 i.;eminaion o, odds; before the race-is enforced, it viiaim,- I deal in combating' # vi au 11; .iincouraged by a sis- r u0dn aid many eastern states rely ftr the paltry revenue which the pari-matuel tax gives to them. I;.LiN TiAiES THE REINS j Uncr the directorship of Georgian 1t.in who for a time at least will have the opportunity to carry into ef- fect his new economic policy, Russia will adopf a quieter attitude toward the rest of the nations, expenditures will be materially cut down, loans will be floated in foreign countries, and the rehabilitation of industry will be unrlvtnken withut 'mkin th -nas- that of Stalin would have been adopted. I This latest leader of the Bolshevist regime has proceeded on the assump- tion that because the peasantry has never accepted the communistic theo- ries they are a constant menace to the present regime, and the only way to assure its success is to placate them. On the other hand Trotsky still main- tains that the communistic ideal must be upheld and that if necessary to do this the peasants must be forced into line by the use of stringent methods. It would seem that the policy of Stalin is more likely to be conducive to ultimate success for the commu- nistic government-that is of course if it ever can be successful at all. It is a rather current rumor that already the peasantry are organizing at least politically, and of course, if this is true, unless some concessions are made to them they will sooner or later command enough power to prove an active menace to communism. This "cool-headed opportunist"-Stalin - has sensed the seriousness of the sit- uation and intends to make the most of the single opportunity to save com- munism in Russia. GOVERNMENT COOPERATION Development of Detroit as an avia- tion center received another boost when the army, navy, and department of commerce pledged their cooperation to obtain the necessary authority for use of Grassy island as a municipal airport. The site is declared ideal and will be a welcome addition to the avia- tion facilities of the community. Likewise, the announcement that Detroit is to have a reserve unit of the naval air service providing Congress appropriates suficient money at the short session this winter is of inter- eCt to those interested in aviation. The successful backing of this measure in Congress by Michigan representatives would materially assist the air devel- opment program of this district. SO ENDS A CAREER With the, recent resignation of Her- bert Henry Asquith, First Earl of Ox- ford and Asquith, ended one of the longest and most momentuous careers of any Englishman of recent decades --leader of the often great Liberal party. Although his resignation has been looming as almost inevitable because of the quarrel with Lloyd George last May over the attitude that the Liberal party should take toward th general strike, still any man who has reached his 75th year, and has been for the best part of half a century in public life, serving as Prime Minister for a I long consecutive term and a still longer time as leader of his party, may with just grace seek retirement. The generous spirit of this great man can be demonstrated no more fit- tingly than by quoting his own words upon his resignation. "Though my health has been restored, I feel the anxieties and responsibilities of lead- ership ought not to be undertaken or continued by anyone who cannot be reasonably certain that he can stand the strain. I do not contemplate retirement from public life and hope that I may be of some service to the State and to Liberalism....1. CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants wil,dhowever, be'regarded as + confidential upon request. A FAIR MINDED REPLY To The Editor: have read with great interest your editorial The Shallow Mind" in The Michigan Daily of October 17, 1926. My first thought is that you are loyal to the,. University of Michigan. You abuse me and call me names. I do not object to that at all. However, loyalty to the University is not in- volved with being loyal to any one man on earth. It is fair to judge of a tree by its fruits. Dr. Little has been particularly unfortunate in public ut- terance. In the matter of prohibition, which is a vital issue in the Univer- sity and everywhere, he stammered. l'o mi.e subject of birth control, which is not a serious issue anywhere, and certainly not in the University of Michigan, he took a peripheral posi- t on. If he grows, and he will out- fold, he wtll be sorry and ashamed of his birth control record within less than a quarter of a century. I enclose the full text of my criti- cism of Dr. Little, which was written to the Sault Ste. Marie News and was invoked by an editorial in that paper. If I am ift error, then no harm will have been done; if I am right, good will follow. As to whether I am "shallow and inane" does not matter. I am not President of the University of Mich-' igan. It is fair, proper and important to discuss Little's fitness for the great( 4 -5 4 o1-.n n 4n... WYr.... 4-. is .. .+-- - 0CALL THE COPS! Football is not the most interestingj sport in Ann Arbor. More students take part in the Maj 8:40 fight every night than participate in a football game, when Minnesota is knocking them out right and left. The popular boast now is: "I made the 8:40 last night in 80 minutes flat." * * * The Maj should have an usher and half of their police force out in front to line up the students and townspeople as they gather forthat long wait for the second show. After all, it's the manager's responsibility to get his patrons in safely. " R SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST O~iiii RLL MAN'S INHUMANITY TO MAN Many questions * were asked the Union information booth men last Saturday. Most of them were funny but a few were serious. Now, if they I would only open that booth some day when the building wasn't filled with alumni trying to buy or sell football tickets and a student could get in, wel would ask a few questions. * * x* For instance, Mr. Information, where is that committee that was to adjust the highway robbery inflicted on all students except the entering' class, wherein they pay extra for a life membership which they never re- ceive? * * s And, now that you are handing over, the building, even the tap room, to women, are you going to give them representation on the Boardl t 0 And why should the women go to the trouble of raising several hundred thousand dollars from alumni, when these men might better pay off a part of the Union debt and then make the name fit the facts-calling it Alumni Union? * * * the jo PUP 4. ,- , MUSIC M U ANID DRAMA "TEA FOR THREE" As its first dramatic venture of the year, Comedy Club will present Roi Cooper Megrue's satirical farce "Tea For Three" in the Mimes theater on November 5 and 6. The cast, although it cannot be announced in full will in- clude Minna Miller, who has been prominent for the past three years in campus dramatics, having played the feminine lead of Becky in "Becky Be- have," the Junior Girls Play of last year, as well as being prominently cast in "The Cradle Song" and other productions of Masques and Comedy Club, and James Martin who played in Mimes' "Engaged" and in "The Camberley Triangle." Others in the cast are Vera Johnson, active in dramatics several years ago, and who has returned after two years in pro- fesional musical comedy, and Harland Christie who played in "You Never Can Tell." The play contains but three major roles, the eternal triangle: the wife, the husband and the tertium quid. This situation is not in itself original or clever; it has been overdone and underdone since the inception of the drama. But the treatment in "Tea For Three" is entirely different, for here this situation is satirized, bur- lesqued broadly and turned against it- self. The farcial element is elaborate and potentially serious to an extent that brings out tully the point of the piece. Comedy Club which is a member of the triumvrate on the campus which governs all principal actives in drama- tics produced several outstanding plays last season, notably Bernard Shaw's "Great Catherine" which played for ten performances in Ann Arbor to capacity audiences at every f performance, and could be playing yet! "You Never Can Tell," also by Shaw commanded packed ;houses, and al- though it was damned for being too long (Shaw and Shakespeare have never in the history of the profession been successfully cut) it was popular for other reasons. * * * "NO, NO, NANETTE" Everything that might have been said about this show has been said: it has not beenon the boards for three years without criticism of each detail to be noted in the dramatic columns of every newspaper in the country. It's popu-1 larity is without question-good lines, good music (even if some of the num- bers are hoary with age) and a sure fire production. The company at the Whitney last night might not have been of the best, and attitude of the audience rather in- dicated that Ann Arbor has seen its last presentation of this show; but the fact that there are five companies in Europe speaks for itself. THE ORGAN RECITAL A review, by Elaine Gruber Had an artist heard it, he would have heard from the depth of the organ the golds, the deep, rich purples and the somber grays which he had tried to etch upon his canvas. Had an actor heard it, he would have found an inspiration attuning his tempera- ment to every emotional intensity needed to sway the hearts of any group, however diverse. Had a stu- dent heard it, he would have heard the echo of all the struggles and the at- tainments which had been his during his years of endeavor, while the com- moner would have discovered in the music's depth, the tragedies and the happinesses which had been crowded into his life. And the musician listen- ing to the voice of the organ would have been confronted by every conflict- ing emotion possible, feeling in the organ's grandness, the harmony, the feeling, the depth and technique, which 'had already meant years of toil and hardship and which spell struggle and hardship in the future. And this, though weakly put, tries to explain the recital offered by Palmer Christian, Wednesday afternoon in Hill auditorium. Starting with the grandissimo of Maitland's "Concert Overture," he carried his listeners through realms of fantasy, through the depths of despair into the heights of hope and loveliness, through the la- mentations of lovers, to bring them finally to the climax in that immense creation of Wagner's, "March (Tan- hausser)," excelling even the opening selection, rendering it all as only Palmer Christian could with that marvel of technique and feeling which marks the artist. The choice of the selections from Tanhausser probably swayed the listeners more than any others, expressing the broken-hearted lover in "Eliazbeth's Prayer," in such emotional intensitv as only music. so 1 i t 1 I I f i I : I: I: = (i. i. RENTALS Rider'sl. "asterpens Hold from 6 to 12 times more ink, are self-starters, and most durable of all pens. Our own make. Five minute service. uthorizedDealer Portable -Typewriters ' All makes rented and repaired. A good allowance for your old machine in trade for a Portable. Rider'sPenShop REPAIRING PLEASE DON'T MAKE PATHS ON THE CAMPUS MAN N'S CM* Style - Quality Service Save a Dollar or More at Our Factory Hats Cleaned and Reblocked Fine Work Only Properly Cleaned - No Odor No Gloss - No Burned Sweats Factory Hat Store 617 Packard St. Phone 7415 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) F ti Seienti l'y .lSelected and Prepared-Foods MARGARET'S Open Thursda , Friday, Satur. day and Sunday Evenings 'until 11:00. Fountain Service. I a 4, Grailhamsa a Hollowe'en Decorations And Prty Favorsa raham PsAt Both Ends, of L~f&45'~I5' SThe. Diagonal, a 111llrirtririritllllrlr1111111llrltlllltrlt E'a~llr~~rI IIE1t1E11N~~t1Et111 1lttr I The new campaign song: "8:40 And' Fight." SOME MORE GAS TEAR GAS is expected to stop all hazing of freshmen in the future. Class games will be broken up with gas at- tacks and police billies. * C * TEAR GAS, it is planned by the po- lice department, will drive all alumni from the fifty yard seats at the' Wis- consin game. So that officers may have even better seats. 1* * * WEAR SPIKED SHOES , ANDGET INTO THE MAJ. A WITHOUT BEING CRUSHED * * * DARROW WILL SPEAK Clarence Darrow, famous product of' evolution and lover of animals and criminals, has accepted the invitation to address the student bodies on the need of grass for horses. The lecture will be delivered in Es- peranto, in order that the 4,000,000,000 people who speak this language will be able to understand. (The figures in The Daily Sunday were wrong). This should not keep anyone away, how- ever, as the universal language will be translated into English for those of the audience who happen to speak that archaic tongue. Kernel. * * * * 0 Sneak a student into the strong- hold of the customers! Help ROLLS buy one of those Stadium bonds, the resulting good seatsE going to two students elected by the campus at large. MARINES PREPARE FOR ACTION Teak gas and shrapnel will be used by the Horse Marines, if necessary, to keep order in the Tolstoy meeting this afternoon, Admiral Ixzo announc- ed last night. The police will handle the situation by themselves unless they run out of tear gas, in which case the artillery unit of the Marines is to be brought into play. * * * It is believed that with these meas- lures the vast crowds expected to seek f entrance will be handled with very little loss of life, and that the meeting I __,.,---- -_--I O00 E. Liberty St. Phone 9215 s a - Have You Paid Your Suscriptiion to.th a Michigan Daly aa All subscriptions of $3.75 not paid by Novembera 15th advance to $4.25. After November 20th,al unpaid subscriptions will be sopdand billd' Sat the rate of 5c pe isae Hos Manger a House naDily i -y,