PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,,- (-) , , I .\I I, , 1, *, , , ,, r : TUESDA", T, PAGE FOuR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER tO, 192~ .... ternal strife of China and, to a lesser 'h t t degree, the unrest inIndia also in- dicate that the East may e the danger Published every morning except Monday zone of the world in the future. during the University year by the Board in. Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Pf'ss 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-I lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate, of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.00. Offices:tAnn Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF, Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR SMITH H. CADY, JR. Editor................W. Calvin Patterson City Editpr................Irwin A. Olian News Editors........... Frederick Shillito 1Philip C. Brooks Women's Editor.......... . ....Marion Kubik Sports Editor............Wilton A. Simpson Telegraph Edior..........Morris Zwerdling Music and Drama........ Vincent C~WalU, Jr. Night Editors Charles Behymet Ellis Merry I Carlton Champe Stanford N. Phelps J o Chamberlin Courtland C. Smith ames Herald C: ssam A. Wilson Assistant City Editors Carl Burger Henry Thurnau Joseph Brunswick Reporters Maion Anderson Miles Kimball Alex Bochnowski Milton Kirshbaum Jcan Campbell Richard Kurvink. Martin J. Cohn G. Thomas McKean, Clarence Edelson Adeline' O'Brien William Emery Kenneth Patrick Alfred Lee Foster Morris Quinn Robert E. Finch James Sheehan John Friend -N. 3. Smtith Robert Gessner Sylvia Stone ElainetGruber William Thurnau Coleman J. Glencer Milford Vanik Harvey J. Gunderson Herbert Vedder Stewart Hooker Marian Weles Morton B. Icuve Thaddeus Wasielewski Paul Kern Sherwood Winslow Ervin Laltowe .U INESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER THOMAS D. OLMSTED. JR., Advertising.................Paul W. Aavild Advertising.....a..........William C. Pusch Advertising..............Thomas Sunderland Advertising..........George H. Annable, Jr. Circulation................T. Kenneth Haen Publication.............. .John H. Bobrink Accounts...............Francis A. Norquist Assistants SUPPORT THE AMENDMENTS Just where opposition to the pro- posed amendments to the Union con- stitution would arise is a difficult thing to discover. - Freshmen who, should the amend- ments pass, would automatically be- come life members after four years in the University, certainly would not oppose such a suggestion; present life members still in school, would receiveI a ten dollar refund from this year and1 and each succeeding year's tuition; should be strongly in favor of the change; and all other male students, who might receive a life membership for the difference between $50 and the total amount of Union fees already paid by him, would be accorded the maximum of liberal treatment possi- ble by such a valuable and expensive institution as the Union. These amendments cannot be acted upon, however, unless 600 members attend the meeting which has been called for tomorrow. For his own benefit, therefor, as well as for the good of the rest of the present and future students and for the elimi- nation of one more worthy but bother- some annual campus drive, should each Union member assist in the pass- ing of these amendments tonorrow. VACATIONS IN POLITICS Nothing is more true than the state- ment that the President of the United States is public property. If he seeks any future whatsoever in politics, he must continually play to the popular favor ;and besides managing the larg- est business in the world, the people of the United States expect him to take hours off each day in shaking hands with them and kissing babies and otherwise generally wasting time. Now the President's vacation has entered the political grab-bag, and it appears that even that short period no longer belongs to him. Last sum- mer, abandoning his life long vaca- tion home in New England, President Coolidge went to New York. This on the surface would appear to be insig- nificant enough, but when we remem- ber that Al Smith, a Democrat, had carried the Empire State for governor two years ago in the face of the Cool- idge majority for President; and that that same Al Smith would again head the Democratic ticket in the Novem- ber elections and thereby threaten the Republican senators, there appears to be an ulterior motive. There was a reason for flattering the people of New York with the presence of the President for two months. Now it has been announced that Coolidge will go West for his vacation in 1927. If there is any particular spot in the country where the Repub- licans are notably weak it is in the Middle West where farm relief has been neglected and in the Far West where the people still consider Sen- ator Hiram Johnson in the light of a hero and follow him on his World Court stand. It has become apparent that somewhere in the West the Pres- ident will spend the summer, repair- ing his political fences and flattering the perhaps gullible Americans with his austere presence. There seems to be reasonably no excuse for the last of these great de- mands which the Americans make upon their President. It is enough 'to expect him to shake hands with several thousand high school Wash- ington clubs every spring without add- ing the burden of dictating his vaca- tion site. California, which Randolph Hearst favors, would perhaps be a fine place for a summer vacation, but if the President must spend his own vacation why not let him choose th place himself?_ TESD OLL FUBND PASSES DOLLAR MARK We'll probably be talking about that 0. S. U. game for the next week or two, so if you don't like to hear aboutd it, now's the time to cancel your sub- scription. (The rates go up today.) * , ,4 It was only after a good deal of worry and argument that we got top see the game at all. We went downA to Columbus without a ticket, hoping to get into the press box, but fearingo for the worst. Mr. Pollard down there got quite sarcastic when we askedr for a press box ticket on the grounds' of being "humor editor" of the Daily.t "Say," he said, "do you think thist game is going to be funny?"j * * * Finally he agreed that we ought toI view the spectacle, and because the press box was filled, he said he was giving us a good ticket in a field box.l If he hadn't handed over that ticket we would have had to write a story about how it seems to be one of those outside the walls. * * * MORE BAND PLAYS1 We have been told about two playsI in the band struggle that we missed entirely. We make no claims for mu-I sical knowledge anyway. It seems that Ohio's drum-major fumbled his baton on his march down the field,1 and didn't recover until they hadI spelled out "Ohio" and made a few other plays. Michigan's leader, after the game, threw his baton too high over the goal I posts and the pass was incomplete. He recovered immediately, however. Variect-colored streamers w e r e thrown from the upper deck on Ohio's stands, adding to the festive scenes. Guns were fired and a bomb landed in the bleacher stands. That latter is one thing the Michigan Athletic as- sociation hasn't tried to do to the students. s * s An ambulance was waiting out in front, of the stadium, and as far as we could see the only ones who would have to use it would be the cops that tried to keep ticketless fans from breaking down the iron gates in a mad rush to see what all the yelling was about inside. * * *r Ohio's cheerleaders rode around the field on bicycles bearing signs in the wheels which spelled out, "Beat Michigan" but you could also read it, "Be At Michigan," which was good advice. * * * An Ohio man near us at the game Saturday said that whenever an air- plane passed over the stadium it meant good luck for Michigan. Just then two planes appeared and Benny threw a pass to Benny over the goal line. * * * TO MINNEAPOLIS VIA BIKE s ME ? V r Admiral Ixzo, having sworn off horse racing for life, left quietly for the Minnesota game on his two. cylinder bicycle. His assistant is traveling incognito. ** * FUND WAKES UP As soon as we left town the money began to come in for the fund.I MUSICG.R§JHAVIS AND DRAMA LBOOKLS THE MATiNEE JUSICALE Travel - Poetry - Plays - Fiction - Biographies A study of Russian music in its A Very Complete Stock of the Latest and Best Books. development, and the general charac- teristics of this school will be the ! subject of a piano-lecture given by Andrew Haigh, instructor in the - piano faculty of the School of Music, _.At Both Ends of The Di goni!1 at the second meeting of the Matinee Musicale, which will be held in the Assembly hall of the :Union at 4 I _____4_________ : George Ahn Jr. Melvin H. Baer D. M. Brown M. H. Cain Daniel Finley B. H. Haley A. Al. Hinkley E. L. Hlulse S. Kerbawy R. A. Meyer Harvey Rosenblum William F. Spencer Harvey Talcott Harold Utley L. J. Van Tuyl J. B. Wood Esther Booze Hilda Binzer Dorothy Carpenter Marion A. Daniel Beatrice Greenberg Selma M. Janson Marion Kerr 'Marion L. Reading Harriet C. Smith Nance Solomon Florence Widmaier o'clock tomorrow afternoon. This program will be one of the most interesting of the year, since Mr. Haigh is an authority on all phas- es of this subject which was the fea- tured studly of the faculty group of the School of Music last year. In con- junction with this Haigh will pre- sent the following piano numbers: Sonata in G minor, Opus 22 . Medtner Islamay .... ........ ...alakireff Prelude in E flat minor, opus 23 .Rachmaninoff Prelude in A minor, opus 23 .Rachmaninoff Sonata No. 4, opus 39 .... Scriabin Incidentally the Islamay by Bala- kireff is considered the most difficult piano number ever written, and Mr. Haigh is one of the intrepid few who have dared incorporate it in their re- pertoire. The Medtner Sonata is equally interesting for Medtner is seldom if ever found on the program of concert pianists in the United States; in fact Rachmaninoff is the only artist who has given it a definite place on his program. And the Rach- maninoff numbers are equally unus- ual, being an entirely different phase of that pianist's work. THE FACULTY CONCERT A review by Robert Carson The cello concert anti the Borodin "In the Convent" were the pleasing highlights of the symphony concert yesterday afternoon and the fact that the orchestra has reached the stage where it can be praised with little damnation instead of being damned "with little praise" testifies to a mark- ed improvement over the previous year. The quality of the musicianship has been raised and the usual mis- I takes and inability to achieve a real fortissimo are the only earmarks of an amateur group evident. But in the I general impression these are over- shadowed by the unity and expression that the symphony has attained in its ensemble work. Samuel Lockwood has certainly done creditable work with the orchestra as the results clear- ly show. But even he became a little profane mentally, perhaps, when he worked them up to a crescendo that never came! The opening number, the Overture to "The Merry Wives of Windsor," by Nicolai, was predominately ior the string and woodwind groups, a light, airy selection, very florid, in which the oboe and bassoon showed a qual- ity heretofore unnoticed in the- Sym- phony. The strings performed their parts admirably. The "ConcertoI Grosso, D Minor" by Vivaldi brought out the distinct talent of Angelina Lockwood who played the violin solo passages. Saint-Saens has written only one cello concerto, "Concert, A Minor, Op. o3," and this requires all the technical skill the cellist can muster. Walter Bloch, who is of the faculty of the Music school and a newcomer to Ann Arbor, executed this difficult selec- tion in fine fashion although his tone is not as powerful and smooth as it might be. The best number on the program was the fine arrangement by Albert Lockwood of "In the Convent" by the Russian, Borodin, a contemporary of Mazorgski and Rimsky-Korsakov. The occasional dissonance, the weird bell sounds and the strange effects produc- ed by the blending of contrasting in- struments are typical of the Russian school, extremely original. s f A iE ORGAN RECITAL Palmer Christian, University or- ganist, will present the following pro- gram at the Twilight Organ Recital at 4:15 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in Hill auditorium: Piece Heroique.............Franck Andante Cantabile (Symphony V) . ......... . . ..... Tschaikowsky Romance Sans Paroles .......Bonnet Prelude and Fugue in D major It may cost you a little more for service at p Rser's Pen Shop. --but it will be REAL SERVICE I and this after all is what counts I FOUNTAIN PENS TYPEWRITERS QUICK SERVICE CC ~\ [A N N'S MN 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 Burneu Sweats Factory Hat Store 617 Packard St. Phone 7415 Beginning Tomorrow Night Granger' s Advanced Class in Dancing '4 Beginning Wednesday, Nore, nbcr 17, SKILLED RPAI'UNG our advanced class in dancing will meet at the Academy. Tuition $5 for term I ' I (Where D. U. R. Stopss at State) of ten lessons. Enroll now by phoning the Academy-5822. Da1-i1GRANGER'S FACAyDEay. Dancing W~ednesday, Friday, Saturday. 5v TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1926 Night Editor-ELLIS B. MERRY TO THE SCARLET AND GRAY In what was perhaps the greatest and most spectacular game in the his- tory of modern conference football, the Maize and Blue won from the Scarlet and Gray Saturday by the nar- row margin of one point. Many spec- tators thought this one point repre- sented just about the difference in the ability of the two teams. A larger majority thought them equal, and that the hand of chance marked up a Mich- igan victory. Ohio gave all her fighting strength in her gruelling drives. Michigap fought back, came from behind, Vand emerged the victor in a dramatic last minute climax to the struggle for the Conference championship. It is trite but true that -while Mich- igan won, Ohio covered herself with glory. The Maize and Blue has not met a team this season which could approach the Ohioans for hard, fast playing, sportsmanship, and fighting spirit. Ohio and Michigan were equals in everything-but the final score. Even this did not dim Ohio's spirit and to the University which can go down to defeat with the courteous gesture that was Ohio's-we extend our hand." PLE AS E MAKE ON THE C~APS I i= THE GOOD EATS CAFETERIA ANNOUNCES THE ADDITION OF Good Eats Orchestra TO ITS EVENING DINNER HOUR BUS INESS COURSES Especially valuable to - University Students. Enter any time. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE State at WilliaI St. -- -' 1- Sample Bills-of-Fare: T-Bone Steak............ Pork Chops.............. Salad Lunch............. Hamburg Steak.......... Meat Pie................ 50C .40C .40c ,1 f All Pr'ices iI-ldc Pot at oes yV~^ of ale iBreaaA and Buitter Dessert MU' kor Coffee GOOD EATS CAFETERIA WILLIAM NEAR STATrE a- r._.__.-.. _ ___,---____-,_, A ASIATIC AFFAIRS( Completion of an alliance betweenj Russia and Turkey has compelled consideration of Asiatic and Eastern European affairs from another view- point, and has given rise to numerous predictions varying from the effect on the signatory countries themselves to the possibility of an Eastern reac- tion against the "yoke of Europe." By cementing Russo-Turkish friend- ship which has been marred in the last few years by the failure to con- elude a commerical treaty, this agree- ment is regarded as marking a new development in Turkey's foreign af- fairs policy. Considered internation- ally, it paves the way for cooperation between the two signatory nations for the benefit of their interests as well as those of other Asiatic people. That the treaty formed will lead to the formation of an union of Asiatic nations is the opinion of part of the Turkish press. In this connection, CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous cominunications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will however, be regarded as confidential upon request. REAL LOYALTY To The Editor: No doubt the greater portion of the students in the University have eitherI read or heard about the illness of Benny Friedman's father. I wonder if we all realize that Mr. Friedman has been in a serious condition sincej last Thursday and just what it reallyx meant when both he and his wife emphatically requested that Benny should not be informed until after the Ohio game. You talk about "Loyalty" and "School Spirit!" It seems to me that that is more genuine unfailing "Loyalty" than we could ever hope to have even in an institution such as the University, and I speak not only from the standpoint of parental love but from the standpoint of what I would conscientiously call REAL i i i I i I I 1 IL ROLLS' STADIUM BOND FUND Today's Contributions "Special Co-Ed".......$ .25° "Hon. Joseph Krashney".. .05 i i i Today's total........... GRAND TOTAL ........ YET TO RAISE ........ .30 1.10 498.90 E 4 * * * That makes Krashney's second trip 'to the Fund, and he thereby sets a record. * * * RUMMAGE SALE FOR FUND My Dear "Toasty"- Three cheers for the High School boy in Detroit. He will certainly be a credit to Michigan, having already in his young years such foresight and' vision. I am sending you 25c-five cents each from two co-eds, five cents, from a loyal Michigan man and tenI cents from me.... Let's have a rummage sale for the .Bach Apres un Reve ............Faure Prelud to "L'Apres-Midi d'un Faune" ......................... DeBussy Scherzo-Pastorale ....a.....Federlein Largo ................. .ndelI This program includes the most popular works of several of the most popular composers and the Debussy "Afternoon of a Faun" which is one of Mr. Christian's most popular num- bers always fills the auditorium. De- bussy is not now regarded with the same aspersion that he was when he was the outstanding "ultra-modern- ist"; and since the noisy advent Stra- vinsky and Milhaud into the field of modern music Debussy's esoteric scores have become more and more agreeable to the conventional ear. The Faure "Apres un Reve" is one of the finest bits from French musical literature, and was transcribed for the organ by Mr. Christian. Samuel Shipman and John B. Hy- j ;, i I . Fm AA