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November 24, 1926 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1926-11-24

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PAGE FC1TM

THE MICHIGAN DAILYW

X1,72

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 Pess 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.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
Michigan,eas second class matter. Special rate
of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-
master General.
Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail,
$4.00.
Offices:eAnn 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 Editor ................Irwin A. Olian
N.Frederick Shiliito
News Editors............ 1 Philip C. Brooks
Womn 's Editor....Marion Kubik
Sports Editor............Wilton A. Simpson
Telegraph Editor......... Mo ris Zwerdling
Music and Drama........ Vincent C. Wall, Jr.
Night Editors
Charles [ehymci Ellis Merry
Carlton (hanpe Stanford N. Phelps
o Chamiberlin Courtland C. Smith
James Herald C.ssam A. Wilson
Assistant City Editors
Carl Burger Henry Thurnau
Joseph Brunswick
Reporters

Maron Anderson
Alex Bochnowski
Jean Cixmpbell
Clarence Edelson
W1'illiam Emery
Al.red Lee Foster
Robert E. Finch
J0ohn ]Frienxd
obert essner
Elaine Gruber
Colcman J. Glencer
Ilarvey 1. Gunderson
Stewart Ihooker
Morton 11 .cove
Paul Kern
Ervin La Rowe

Miles Kimball
Miaon KIrshbaum
Richard Kurvink.
G. Thomas M cean
Adeline O'Brien
Kenneth Patrick
Morris Quinn
James Sheehan
N. J. Smith
Sylvia Stone
William Thurnau
Milford Vanik
Herbert Vedder
Marian Welles
Thaddeus Wasielewski
Sherwood Winslow

are intangible losses which cannot be
computed.
One of the main reasons why the
cost of the strike has been so great
has, of course, been the time required
in reaching a common ground of set-
tlement. This delay has been largely
due to the doubtful leadership of the
miners' spokesman, Mr. hook. A self-
admitted follower of Lenin, he has
confessed that he had hope of seeingI
violent political changes in England.t
It is common knowledge that Mr.t
Cook's decisions are influenced by
Moscow. Now, dismayed at the re-,
sults of his handiwork, he agrees toa
concessions which he would have1
scorned ninety days ago. The miners,
however ,will not accept the govern-a
ment terms which he recommends,
because of his Moscow connections,
and Mr. Cook is paying the price paidf
by leaders who don't keep faith with1
those who follow.
FREEDOM OF THE PRESS
There l something strangely sig-f
nificant in the moves that are taking {
place at the present time to limit the
power of the press in various coun-
tries in the world. In China the Brit-
ish have enforced a monopoly on news
by forcing the price of ingoing and
outgoing American news to 40 cents
per cable word. Roumania has ex-
pelled the United Press correspondent
and has placed gags on native news-
papers because of remarks on the
l lavishness of the royal party at pres-
ent in America. Russia is maintaining
a strict censorship on all news leavingI
the country. Italy and Spain main-
tain practical control of the press,
both local and foreign.
The significant point to be noticed
is that in all of these countries at-
tempting to muzzle the press, there
are governments based only on physi-
cal strength-founded on the princi-
ple that "might makes right." In
countries where the press is free
there is democracy and light. Italy,
Russia, China and Spain are all in the
hands of practical dictators who force
their wishes upon the people at the
point of a gun.
Surely there is in this revelation a
testimonial of the purging power of
the press. Knowledge of the condi-
tions as exposed by the daily news-
papers mean an enlightened electorate
and an intelligent body 'politic. It
means the birth and the perpetuation
of ideas of liberty and democracy, and
the principle of the rule of the un-
molested majority. The press of the
world, where it is allowed freedom of
access and speech, is an eternal force
for good and is feared only by those
who proceed by devious ways to mod-
ern slavery-of will and act.

fiv/ru i ,i

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The Northwestern students ran
amuck in Evanston and Chicago the
other night, celebrating their tying
Michigan for the title, and had a good
time. No heads were smashed, no
tear gas was shot off, no dlamage wias
done apparently.
* * *
The Evanston theaters threw open
their doors and treated their best
customiers to a free show.
* * s

Chicago police have tear gas,
even have machine guns. But

they
they

thought that college students have a
right. to get enthusiastic. But they
are mistaken. They should learn{
from our local department,
* * *
SAPOEM ALY ESSAYES
When I'm reviewing playses
I wait a couple of dayses,

Then praise what New York p
In New York's very phrases.

raises

5.,

_ :i1!//lrl.'Il/il/lllAl//I/I/llUlf///!!

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BUSINE SS STAFF
Telephone 21214
BUSiNESS MANAGER
THOMAS D. OLMSTED, JR.
Advertising...............Paul V. A.dvid
Advertising..............William C. Pusch
Advertising.... ....... ,...'Thomas Sunderland
Advertising...........George Lf. Annable, Jr.
irculation...............T. 'Kenneth Haven
P'ublication.............. .John H. Bobrink
Accounts...............Francis A. Norquist
Assistants;
George Ahn Jr. L. J. Van Tuyl
Melvin Ii. Baer J. 1. Wood
). MI. Brown r sther Booze
M I. 11. Cain Ililda Binzer
aniel Fi nley Diorathy Car penter
B. i. Handley Marion A. Daniel
A. M. Hinkley Beatrice Greenberg
E. L. hlulse Selma M. Janson
S« Kecrbawy Marion IKerr
R. A. eByer 1arion L. Reading
Harvey Rosenblum II arriet C. Smith
W illiam 1'. Spencer Nance Soloxmon
I rvey Talcott Florence Wimaier
harold Utley
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1926
Night Editor-ELLIS B. MERRY

And those whom this amazes
May go express to blazes.
Alf Alpha.
* * *
A DEGREE FOR MARIE
And now the rumor goes around
that Queen Marie was to have been
given a degree when she visited here.
If they are getting so free with them,
maybe we'll get one next spring. May-
be.
* * *
Why not give her a Mistress of
Business Administration degree? She
certainly deserves it after her efficient
economy in travel in this country.
Even Coolidge could take a lesson or
two from her on economy.
* * *
And let's not forget the dear chil-
dren. How about a degree in Highway
Engineering for the princess, who
earned it by her choice of a soft ditch
to drive the car into.
s . "
The Prince ought to get one in Law.
He showed a great knowledge of our
court system when he ventured to
race his car at 50 miles an hour in
traffic and even faster on the high-
way.
hERE'S YOU;RS
r , ..
I/
REALISMa
A freshman was seen coming from
the grid-graph Saturday with a steam-
er rug under his arm. He thought
I-Iarry Tillotson would seat him on the
roof.
* * *
RECEIVED: $498.86
A check for $498.86 was received
in yesterday's mail, and enclosed with
it was this note:
Dear Mr. Hay:
Enclosed find check for $498.86
covering the balance on the Stadium
Bond fund. This check is unsigned
but it should be much easier to get
someone to sign than to have to raise
all that money.

MUSC
D RD A M_____A
Ti_ AF[R- -------T.- Travel - Poetry - Plays - Fiction - Biographies
~S ERN00N. ti: !'ts Organl,
Itecital! lI ai-otat at 4:1Bs
Rta , h Hi da : A Very Complete Stock of the Latest and Bst Books,
o'clock. -
* * * --
TIlE PLAY PRODUt'TI()N 'LASSES .
By Ikentneth Patrick I At Both Ends of The
In their first public present ation of
the season the students of the Play ' i; ! ll __________________lll!!!!1!{{!_llllllIlllllllllII_ li!ll [lili [ll111 il[ llilill ill {
Production classes will offer George fililiiilflilflllHml illlil
Kelly's immensely successful comedy,
"The Torch Bearers." This, the first JASMT PCNEWE-GODTO EATPAEE
pos~by Dvid weu~s anextrmelyDe ANESE I~h n s iv r
production put uw for exhibition pur-
pase5, by D~avId OWen,ls an extremely lcicous vhen rjl ripe. I =
Prp a(i Auywvhre U. S. A1. 2 -.
apt piece for the circumstances sur- ;m1.I hre i. , A. i
Irounding it-so apt, indeed, that the
realistic acting is liable to he sup- ~R~
plemented by realistic settings in the r ,. . 9-1
form of University hall auditorium, L ; -
which has been set aside for the in- MAKE
augural. But, nevertheless, those who i
are willing to give the scenery a few A N's T;-
added touches in their imagination MNCom 9t s pay oIght does not m rfee h
'and - classes, since somorrow is Tsan dsjesg horslay.
seats will be guaranteed a most hi- Style - Quality . Service -,n m wa s ga
larious evening, and may even be Save a Dollar or More at Our Factory -
pleasantly surprised. The cast for I Hats Cleaned and Reblocked
Fine Work4Only-I
the comedy is as follows tProperly Cleaned - No Odor . Dancing Friday and Satrdiclay.
Paula Ritter....Mary Lais Gtekunst No Gloss - No Burne Sweats
Fred Ritter............RDonald Iyons 7 icar tt.Phne715 fKt}.ttJ A. _.'E
Mrs. J. Duro Pampinelli.......,.... . '.4.!Factry H at Stor
. .. .. .. ... ... . .. .. . .. . Hlen Osborn 617 Packar S~t . Ihon 7415 =GR A N GER 'S A CA D E IY .-:Ii
Nellie Fell ............Ruth McCann-_
Florence MeCricket . .I...... . ..... .
.......... .............1Jeannette Cooper __ _ _ _ __lillII_ ___ ____I____!{1 1 I !:
Huxley Iossfrosse....Samuel Bonell -
Ralph Twiller.........Kenneth KingiP L E ASE
Spindler ..............Robert Wetzel'
Clara Shepard... .Kathleen Chisholm
Stage lManager ..... Richard Woelihoff D : T
Jenny................ Dorothy Long: :
Teddy Spearing......Henry Ford Jr. K'E'
The play is in three acts, and re-
port has it tbat the sum of the first HIIANKSGIING WITr'irE'" A D DE" O
two are all that any good playgoer can I We have an assorted line of place ma is and favors for Thanks-
desire and that the third is thrown in giving parties. Brighten up your pory wikith s me cf these good
from the author's and actors' kind- TH looking decorations.
ness of heart. Most riotious results Phone 4744 111i S th Ui ersii XPyt d P 471 V
are obtained when an amateur assem-
blege attempts to tread the boards--._
all the usual ones that have happened I
to us are included along with some .
of more sensational nature. The Play
Producers are taking no chances and
neither is the audience. NEWy rST UENT"
It will take some time to create Is hailed
audiences for the series of one-act IA current
plays which are the forte of the Unm- Ad PHressHONE 8805
versity hall players, no matter what As the pulse .
the quality of them may be, but if i Q an awakening
"The Torch Bearers" can be put over I Studeint body. Let us s' Ivie ur
"As a most significant phe- '": : LII
in proper style, the cause will be con- nomenon there is a publication,
siderably furthered. And there is THE NEW ST'UDENT, which is prmtmg p "" iemS
no doubt but what the cause is worth devoted to telling the goings-on
furthering, of various new :undergrad-uate"_
* * ,* nxuovements."-New York World. ior you.
"TI-HE NEW STUDENT" fur-
WHEN IN DETROIT nishes by far the best opportu- e
The most ambitious Shubertian nity to discover what is going C W1 "W C it
production ever to be staged is "The on in the more progressive sec-
Groat Temptations " which is nov ions of ti.e America Estudent
GetTmttoscommxitis.-Dr. J. . Kirk- e '' y
playing at the Shubert-Detroit and hepatrinkpr md
which will continue at that theater I Try it every week for six iw
.,__ ,.,.i. <,,; J ., cJ) .nLJIUthy $Lf, 1 dL kn[ow.

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ACUTE
With the Chinese General Chang
Kaishek announcing that the revolu-
tionary Cantonese forces will not
suzbside until the extraterritorial
rights of the world powers have been
abolished, and with ll world pow-
ers about to declare that they will not
abandon their nationals in China to
the mercy of the Chinese courts of'
law until order -is restored in that
country, the conditions surrounding
the Chinese ques,.n are becoming
more acute.
If the Cantonese leader keeps hi:
promise, armed intervention of world
lIowers in China will probably be pre-
cipitated.. For six months England
las been willing to intervene if the
suplport of the United States and Ja'
1)01n were forthcoming. Any armed at"
tempt to interfere with the privileges
guaranteed to these nations by exist-
ing treaties is almost certain to bring
armed retaliation.
At the present time, the Pekin gov-
ernment, however weak it may be, is,
the only one recognized in China. The
'antonee leaders have no legal au-
thority over Chinese foreign relations.
If they desire to control in this field,
they can only properly obtain it by
overthrowing the recognized faction
in civil war, establishing a stable gov-
ernent in China, and securing the
recognition of world powers.
If, by their present plan or by any
other design, they imperil the safety
of foreigners or the sovereignity of
world povwers, the Cantonese will find
th;;cxlves opposed by forces farj
tronger' than those of the weak Pekin
government. For the welfare of China
a~ well as the rest of the world, of
course, it is hoped that such action
may be avoided.
BRITISH STRIkE COSTS

l
t
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f
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CAMPUS OPINION
Anonymous cominunications will be
disregarded. The names of communi-
cants wil, However, be regarded as
confidential upon request.

ALL IS LOST
To The Editor:
The fort is stormed, the last strong-
hold has fallen, the Bastille is taken,
A last stand like that of Custer's has
given away.
For years the inroads of effeminacy
and the co-ed have filled us with,
dread, but through it all there has
been until now one haven of refuge.
We-have lamented the passing of!
Joe Parker's, Larry Dam's and the
Orient. The good old days of sweaters,
bicycles, fights, and picket fences are
long gone. One time refuges such as
the barber shop and the stag lunch
are no more. Bobbed haired co-eds in-
vade them all. Today's rendezvous is
the amber-lighted tea room and the
trick sandwich shop.
After a football victory, where is
the olden mankilling, all-buck, hairy-
chested snake dance that ended in a
mass celebration? After the last
victory at Columbus, where was the
crowd that in 1922 riotously followed
the band miles down High street to
the Deschler Hotel and cheered itself
crazy in the lobby? Where are the
rousing send-offs for the team when
the whole Ann Arbor Police Depart-
ment had to be on hand to save the'
depot?
The Union came and it looked like;
a new abutment to stem the tide of
effervescing femininity. It has failed.
W\\omen are now seen in all parts and
the sanctum of the front door is a
myth.
Knickers and Uneeda Biscuit rain
coats have come and, Lafayette, they
are really here. One can no longer
live on a modest laundry bill and feel
right in classes with the pillars of the
State Street haberdashers and beside
the luxurious co-eds.
We have been resigned through all

1
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for the coming week with a specia
matinee tmorrow afternoon.
Last summer an epic battle was
waged in New York--the Ziegfield-
Shubert controversy over the un-
draped ladies in their shows. Zieg-
field, after having created the
present vogue for nudity on the
American stage, decided that it was
all wrong to undermine the morals of
the eternal butter-and-egg men, and
discarded his imitation of the Folies
Bergere for the ankle length cos-
tumes of "The Palm Beach Girl." The
Messrs. Shubert having just begun to
capitalize the appeal of knees and
ankles thought it would be nice to
continue in the manner. The result
is "The Great Temptations" which
recently finished a run of over a year
in ,New York.

mon ILis ( .. V ) an~ yoUU 1Kl
why.
ii rainy New York.
Iere's a dollar for a ° six
mouth trial subscription-
me.......................
Ad~dress ............... ......

c&.1 a . . a. s , ar Y y e a . Y Y x

be done right.
GIVE US A T RIA L

711 North

University Ave.

Next to Arcade Theatre

A

hIn+ t iixo thue nn w is jari t2utlar i

(Signed) t. E. Vated. odious in this respect; on the con-
trary it is good entertamilment.
A fine idea! We would sign it our- (Shows have to be that to satisfy
selves but it is made out on the State Broadway's appetite fora year.) It
Savings Bank and we have all our is an exceptional revue. There are
fortune tied up in the Farmers and thirty-five scenes of the stupendous
Mechanics vault. The line forms at hippodrome type with every con-
the Daily today at noon. All those in- ceivable effect used. Roseray and
terested are asked. to be orderly, and Capella, imported from the Casino ie
to line up just as they do at the Paris, where one of the best dancing
theaters.-,. teams to click in big time last year.
* * * The Duell Sisters, also dancers, are
FUND SHORT OF GOAL ' breaking into the game for the first.
The ROLLS' Stadium Bond fund time, together with Fodi Brown who
drlve ends today, being $498.86 short heads the list of better known stars,
of the goal If we get that check are responsible for much of the suc-
signed we can go over the top, but no cess of the show.
more campaigning is to be (lone by At the Garrick theater Ethel Waters,
the many thousands of enthusiastic who has sung her famous blues for
workers. The questionnow is, how the Columbia people for some time,
are we going to spend the vast sum is the star of the Negro entertainment
Collected which is at that theater. Songs and
* * * character work are the feature of
A BETTER PLAN I "Miss Calico." Miss Waters puts her
We have decided that our sugges- I numbers over in the vaudeville tradi-
tions regarding the revision of Pres- tion with a rapid burlesque of famous
ident Little's plan didn't go quite far I characters of her race. Perhaps the
enough. What we need is still an- jbest is "Sweet Mama, Lulu Belle,"
other set of varsity teams that can j which will make Leonore Ulric wiggle
play in Detroit so that the customers j in envy. A revival meeting that is
can st!,',! a t - h.handled with fine discrimination and

4 % i 4 41{
4 ,.

p

3'itr'

Though economists have been un-
able to estimate all the economic
losse to l ,gland because of the coal
trilko, they have compiled statistics
showing the direct cost to British
trade and industry. Three hundred

T . Udoiui u b .i~rn nf t. of rui t an uu ap
i trit rfi rr re rttn. rrrr~j~pr# tt iW~r# rtfi
x ur u1tt xaI ntr. xThui r artt1r tph'ir#t ai
iprnrt brkkza. O r er rniw tt qt~ r gr.

million pounds is 'considered a ton- }this and we have understood the fu-
servative estimate, not including the tility of prote~tations in "Campus
losses due to the general disturbance I Opinion." There was always one
of trade. Of the indirect and hence refuge and secure there, we were con-
total losses, no estimate can be ac- !tent to suffer in silence. No matter
... _Tn.! .L ..! .__ . h w as i n+i n 1,. n ,r.

i

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