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November 27, 1926 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1926-11-27

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PAGE FOU

(T t
.ublished every morning except Monday
during the University year by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
Members of Western Conference Editorial
Association.
t hetso ciated Prbss is exclusively en-
titledl to the use for republication of all news
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise
cei to in this paper and the local news pub-
lished! therein.
F' 'terezd at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
iiugan, as second class matter. Special rate
ofs ostae granted by Third Assistant Post-
miaster General.
Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail,
$4-00.
Ofices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May-
nard Street.I
Ph net: Editorial, 4925; business 21214.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR
SMITH H. CADY, JR.,
Editor.. .. ...W. Calvin Patterson
City Editor...... ...... ... .Irwin, A. Olian
N ew s Editors............ .khiic . Br to
Women's Editor..,M... . arion Kubik
Sports Editor........... .Wilton A. Simpson
Telegraph Editor............Morris Zwerdling
Music and Drama....... Vincent C. Wall, Jr.
Night Editors
Charles Behymet Ellis Merry
Carlton Chanpe Stanfrder .Phelps
Jo Chamberlin Courtland C. Smith
James Herald Cssam A. Wilson
Assistanlt City Editors
Carl Burger Henry Thurnau
Joseph Brunswick
Reporters

classes are disrupted. Students whoq
live atea distance would not object
to the extra day of idleness here and
those who live very near and go home
anyway would have just that much
longer to recover.
The class work accomplished is
negligible on this Friday. By con-
densing its dissertations slightly,nthe
faculty could improve the subjects and
still use one less day. If student opin-
ion counts for any thing here, as the
existence of a Student council sug-
gests, why not have the extra day off.
WHAT A SHAME!
When the Right Reverend Arthur
Foley Winnington-Ingram left Ann
Arbor a few weeks ago, he took with
him some interesting unpublished
views which he later disclosed while
on the Princeton campus. Sadly
enough, the views had to do with foot-
ball. "American football," he said,
"is a deadly bore in the first place,
and furthermore, you can't play foot-
ball very much after you leave col-
lege. Why I played rugby for forty
years! That's the game with excite-
ment. I have seen three games of
American football and have not been
thrilled once; American football is
just an eternal 'scrum.'"
Commenting on the huddle system,
he branded it as unsatisfactory, say-
ing: "I can't understand what they
are talking about all the time. I sup-
pose they are cooking up some plan
or other, but that makes the game
slower," Up to the fourth word in
this quotation the Lord Bishop said
something; from there on he exempli-
fied it.
What a shame that some people are
asked to make statements about things
of which they seem to have so little
knowledge; but what a greater shame
that the Lord Bishop of London could
not have been in Columbus, Ohio,
November 13.
With judgments being handed down
from the courts freeing mining com-
panies from responsibility for dis-
asters in their plants, it is apparently
time that ne)# safety laws be enacted
by the various states in the mining
districts.

__THE MICHIGAN DAILY'
T 1OASTED ROLL MSIC
WEATHER:- AN
CHICAGO: j DRAMA
RAIN
Nothing could please us more than RO$ENTHAL
to have it rain in Chicago today. After
treating Michigan last year to a mud- IT. Moriz Rosenthal, pianist, will
slinging battle that has been surpass- give the following program in the
ed only in political campaigns in second concert of the Extra Concert
Detroit, Chicago's citizens have the I series at 8 o'clock Monday evening in
nerve to force the Army and Navy to Hill auditorium.
play in that very same clay pit, SIonata op 31 No. 3 in E flat........
Soldier's field. . . Beethoven'
* * * Etudes Symphoniques.....Schumann
SPESHUL SERVUS!!! Nocturne op. 9 No. 2 ..........Chopin
Surpassing even The Daily's Great- Six Etudes ................... Chopin
est Collegiate Sports Department, Valse op. 64 No. 2 ............ Chopin
Rolls will have its own correspondent Chant Polonais ............... Chopin
at Soldier's Field to wire a cover of Minstrels ................... Debussy
the Army-Navy ping-pong match. In I Musical Box ................. Liadow
order to insure his success, the Rolls ( Papillons (Butterflies) .....Rosenthal
representative has been furnished I Hungarian Rhapsodie No. 2 .....Liszt
with four rain-coats( in case three get j M. Rosenthal has for the past few
stolen), two umbrellas (one can blow weeks been touring the States with
away), and a swimming suit. this program, which is the result of
El Espectador. a most careful blending of the mast-
ers. It must be . remembered that
Rosenthal is typically of the old
DROWING OUT FOOTBALL school-one of the" few left. Next to
LAKE TILLOTSON, Nov. 26.-Dig- De Pachmann he is probably the
ging Michigan's new stadium is just greatest player of Chopin in the pro-
one lake after another in the opinion fession, and as an exponent of Bee-
of the contractors. Before they had thoven and Schumann he is the rank-
gone a dozen feet they struck water ing artist.
and everytime they sink a shaft now In all previoustvisits toAmerica and
it turnss'into a well. in the press of the continent as well
*Rosenthal has been hailed as the

SATURDAY, NOVEM3IltR 27, 1920
fll filfiili lil llllilllilllilllilliii1111I1111III1IH I l 1 il ii fti11i11ll IIlIlIII lillIIIlllllIIIIIilll i 11I II I [lIIIllIf1111ll I i ttll i ill
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GR9IHAVIYS
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r Travel - Poetry - Plays - Fiction - Biographies
A Very Complete Stock of the Latest and Best Books.
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BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 21214
BUSINESS MANAGER
THOMAS D. OLMSTED, JR.
Advertising.................Paul W. Aitmd
Ativerting.............. William C. Pusch
Aldv-rtisi-g...............Thomas Sunderland
Advertising...........George H1. Annable, Jr.
Circulation................T. Kenneth Haven'
Publication.................John H. Bobrink
Accounts...............Francis A. Norquist
Assistants
George Ahn Jr. L. J. Van Tuyl
MelviIt. Baer J. B. Wood
1. M.:Brown Esther Booze
M. H.Cain Hilda Binzer
DlanielFinley Dorthy Carpenter
.I 1. Hlandley Marion A. Daniel
A. M. Hinkley Beatrice Greenberg
E. -1.. lulse Selma M. Janson
S. Kerhawy Marion Kerr
R. A. Meyer Marion L. Reading
Harvey Rosenblum Harriet C. nith
Wilham V. Spencer Nance Solomon
Ilarvey Talcott Florence Widmaier
HIarold Utley
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1926
Night Editor-CARLTON G. CHAMPE
DRAMATICAL SUPERIORITY
Michigan, through the immense ef-
forts of men who are now alumni and
some who are still in school, has ac-
quired a prestige in all things con-
nected with universities that is very
hard to equal. It has been years and
years since a poor football team was
turned out here. Michigan's teaching
staff has been represented on import-
ant national projects of all kinds, and
the laboratories of our campus have
made some of the ranking scientific
achievements of tie day. As pro-
nounced as any superiority attained
by the University, however, is the
superiority which has been achieved
in the line of dramatics, with the
Michigan Union opera as the crowning
achievement.
Northwestern may share the foot-
ball title with Michigan; other teach-
ing staffs may approach our own; but
in one line Michigan is acknowledged
supreme, and that is in the field of the
college opera.
E. Mortimer Shuter, the director of
campus dramatics, has raised the
standard of this annual production
to such a level that other schools send
representatives here to learn how it
i: done; and the representatives leave
still wondering. This year the pro-
duction, besides spending a week in
Ann Arbor, will visit fifteen of the
largest cities in America, carrying the
rame of the University to thousands
of pople; and solidifying the alumni
bodies of seven states.
Stch an accomplishment is another
evidence of the prestige for which
Michigan should strive in every field.
It is a supremacy that is unique in
these days of intense rivalry between
great universities. Students of Mich-
igan should be proud of their opera,
as they are proud of their athletic
teams, as a symbol of what the Uni-
versity attains in all lines, as a symbol
of accomplished superiority.
TIIANIiSGIVING VACATION
Formerly, the University gave stu-
dents a vacation on both Thanksgiv-
ing day and the Friday after it. There
seemed to be no particular objection
to this scheme on the part of the stu-
dent body, but comparatively recently
it was changed and Than1sgiving was
red(uced from the ranks of a respect-
able holiday to the mere status of a

i

CAMPUS OPINION
Anonymous communications will be
disregarded. The names of communi-
cants wil,. however, be regarded as
confidencial upon request.

The new stadium will be built in
the center of this beautiful expanse
of water, it has been decided. Find-
ing it impossible to drain the lake,
the contractors will put in fl'oating
goal posts and build the stands on
rafts.
* * *
FOOTBALL SEASON IS OVER!
LONG LIVE THE STOVE LEAGUE!
Now is the time of year when alumni
boast of their fifty-yard seats and
students argue about the All-Confer-
ence and All-American teams. It is'
only natural that there should be dif-
ferences of opinioh regarding the
worth of the various players because
after all the students see very little
of them. But ROLLS sport experts
agree on the following selection:
* * *
ROLLS' ALL-EVERYTHING TEA1I
Smythe, Harvard ................ LE
Cameron, Chicago ............ ..LT
Butts, Indiana ...............1
Olson, Iowa ....................... C
Yegge, Iowa ....................JG
Itellnian, Indiana .............. . RT
Meeks, Miss. AgglesE...........R
Bunn, Iowa..........
Borden, Chicago...............LI
Kr gJ.- Chicago ................RH
Ixzo, Navy .......................F
HONORARY MENTION - Ooster-
baan, Michigan; Yost, Michigan; Til-
lotson, Alumni; Dickenson, Rating;
Red Grange, Hollywood.
All-Conference coach-the guy who,
calls the plays from the stands.
All-Conference manager-Alumni,r
Everywhere.
All-Alumni ticket distributor-Harry'
Tillotson, Ann Arbor and Detroit.

greatest technician of all times.

i
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Moriz Rosentlta1

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rC/.d.Ir/.I".d. °'./«0d.J1diddd«/"1.ii "dd..A~.ddd. 'Y~,/,I ".IY~. C/"/~. ''.0dadd./.0.J1, I"drl1d.I. '"0',,, 'ddd.. °d. i. ../".d . . '"'. "d..a
t

FARMERS AND MECHANICS BANK

101-105 S. MAIN STREET

"LOUDER VOICE WEEK"
To The Editor
Have some of the faculty been
chlorinated? Or did the big "Bugga-
man" sweep down upon our bene-
factors in the dead of night and steal
away their tender voices? Possibly
they lost them at the Ohio game
though not probably.
How any class can be expected to
absorb the normal degree of knowledge
from the instructor when that said
instructor whispers confidentially and
complacently with the members of the
front row is beyond my feeble con-
ception.
Especially encouraging was an in-'
cident in the language department. A
student asked the instructor if he
would kindly speak a little louder.
Whereupon the instructor swept down
upon him with a fury equivalent to
the wrath of God, and informed him
that, "If you don't like the way this
class is conducted you can get out!"
Students complain of sitting class
after class in that God-awful silence
while the instructors mumble mildly
to themselves or else rattle on at an
incomprehensible pace.- -
There is no criticism of the faculty
for we students should not have
neglected them so long. Therefore,
while Michigan is having "Better
State Week," "Better Homes Week,"
or "Clean-Up Week," let's organize
"Louder Voice Week for University
Instructors."
If this can't be accomplished other-
wise the student body might present
these few shy instructors, who sound
like a run down phonograph, with a
megaphone, or else equip the class
with ear-trumpets. However, this
might prove impractical for the ma-F
jority of the professors speak at least
audibly.
For the benefit of those who do not
speak audibly I hope this letter will
incite some further comment from
those students who are lulled to sleep
by the mumbling of these sleepy
drones.
Here's to the hope that this is a
starter for "Louder Voice Week for
Michigan Instructors."
-Sir A. Wellington.

330 S. STATE STREET

recently the New York critics have
found him to be less of the technician
(he is now over sixty) and more of the
lyric pianist-the poetic expression of
his maestro Liszt and Chopin with
the superlative ability of a perfect
mastery of the mechanics.
A FERTILE AND FUTILE GENIUS
George Kelley's present position as
the author of seevral of the most
1 popular plays in recent years is an
anomaly-a nicely graduated evolu-
tion from the rough-and-ready buf-
foonery of "The Torch Bearers" (the
Play Production Classes will present
next 'Wednesday night in University
hall) to the 1ecently prosperous and

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BEGIN NOW!
"Member of Federal Reserve Sjpstem."

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All-American ushers-Boy Scouts, 4U '11- -
America. maligned "Daisy Mayme," his current
All-Universe tear-bombers - Police-
AllUniers ter-bmbes -Polce- The Torch Bearers began with the
men, Ann Arbor. antics of a group of amateur actors
All-Michigan spirit-Dead, Ann Ar- who allow a charity success to go to
bor.
their heads. It is a first rate comedy
All-Alumni spirits-Alcoholic, Wind- I without a deal of purpose behind, it;
sor. good entertainment and little more.
All-University nuisance - Alumni, "The Show Off" was even more suc-
Homecoming. cessful in its way. With an unmis-
All-American guest-Queen Marie. takable vein of -satire running through
All-Michigan curse-Classes on Fri- it, it offered a wide appeal, and was
day after Thanksgiving. immediately acclaimed.
All-Student stands-Jackson, Mich- jBut then, as becomes a young artist
igan. upon whose head the hand of approval
* * * ! rests heavily, Mr. Kelley became idac-
Some of the players have been tic. "Craig's Wife" cheerfully indi-
moved from the positions they played cated a feminine nation and walked
on their own teams in hopes that off with the Pulitzer Prize. His latest
they would show. up better in the success, however, is not so well re-
strange surroundings. ceived. "Daisy Mayme" has a capable I
* * * 'leading lady (Jessie Busley) and was

- - - - - - - - - -

J" 0.0ow

« " "./?i V.0'o ~..rpP.°/.1.J, . .+ . ,/,. . .r .. °. J.v". %. .~d0.0. !"., ~~./". .1,d'. .e".P..y . ~".Jlo'~" /.

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Our prices will interest you.

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for extra warmth, we have all kinds.

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Tillotson gets his name in twice, but personally directed and produced by
he is worthy of every honor we can the author.
bestow "upon him.
* * * THE FlACILTY CONCERT
MOVIES A LA FOOTBALL The following program will be
We felt very much at home in the given Sunday afternoon at 4:15
last row of the balcony of the Mich- o'clock in Hill auditorium at the
igan theater in Detroit the other night Faculty Concert by Madame Karola
when they showed a picture of the Zagorska, soprano, and M. Stabilaus
Michigan team in action on Ferry Wyszatycki, tenor, assisted by a sex-
field. The movie itself was taken tet of Ann Arbor musicians including
from the top of the stands, and we Samuel P. Lockwood, first violin;
were way over at one side of the Angelina Lockwood, second violin;
wereway ver t on sid of he Pauline Kaiser,. viola; Janette Fraser
-theater, so that it was just like home.
s " # Wieder, 'cello; Mary Alice Case, see-
MILLIONS POUR INTO FUND ond violin; Albert Lockwood, piano.
I.
Dear Timothy: L
DearTlmohyzQuartet D minor, Opus Posth
Don't let the Stadium Bond subscrip- Q tp Shuert
tlon lapse! I am enclosing I0,004,00 Allegro; Andante Con Moto; Scherzo;
marks for the good cause. Also two Presto. .....The St-ing Quartet
tickets to the reception for Queen
Marle. Also two tickets for the Con- Aria from "Sona ula"......Bellini
vocation for the Queen of Rouniania. I Spring Song ................Chopin
These can be auctioned off, proceeds Aria from "La Dame des Pignes"
for the fund. Yours, ..................... Tschaikovsky
Clova BIO~ssOI Madame Karola Zagorska
i I III*. ,

For Ladies and Men
For your selection we are offering a large assortment of Wool Blouses,
Leather Coats and Jackets in Tan or Grey Suede, Brown Reindeer Flesher,
Black and Brown Napa and Horse Hide. Also Corduroys, Wool Plaids
and Wool Navakotes, all at a saving.
College Robes and
All kinds, for every need, just what you' need these cold nights.
Also a large showing of Auto Robes and Steamer Rugs.

CAMPUS OPINION
Because of the large number
of letters which have been sent
to the Editor this year, and due
to the limited amount of space
on the editorial page, it is re-
nr -g t d th t nntrihb to r st to th e

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