WAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY - ,* -: a.: 1 i __DAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1926 Published livery morning except Monday during the University year by the Board i Control of. Studient Publications. Members of -Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated P 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- lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, assecond class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail,' $4.00.1 Of4ices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business 21a14. EDITORIALSTAFF Telephone 4825 MANAGING EDITOR SMITH H. CADY, JR. Editor.... .......W. Calvin Patterson City Editor............. .Irwin A. Olian News itors..Frederick Shil ito NewsEdiors ~.......1Philip C. Brooks Women's Editor..............Marion Kubik Sports Editor............. Wilton A. Simpson TelegraphEditor...........Morris Zwerdling Music and Drama........Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Night Editors Charles Behymet Carlton Champe J o Chamberlin ames Herald Assista Carl Burger Jose Maron Anderson" Alex Boc nowski Jean Campbell Clarence Edelson William Emery Alfrcd Lcee Foste: Robert E. Finch olin Friend Z obert (;cssner Elaine Gruber Coleman J. Glence Harvey J. Gunde Stewart Hooker Morton B. 1cove Pal ern Ervin La Moowe Ellis Merry Stanfosrd N. Phelps Courtland C. Smith Ctssam A. Wilson ant City Editors Henry Thurnau ph Brunswick Reporters Miles Kimball Milton Kirshuaurn Richard Kurvink. G. Thomas Mcicean Adeline O'Brien er Kenneth Patrick Morris Quinn James Sheehan N. J. Smith Sylvia Stone er William Thurnau rson Milford Vanik Herbert Vedder Marian Welles Thaddeus Wasielewski Sherwood Winslow knowledged the American stand that retroactivity should not affect acquir- ed rights, but called for specific cases of violations and promised relief onI that condition. Of course, it is impos- sible to furnish concrete cases because the laws do not go into effect untilI Jan. 1. It was to avoid such violations and the disagreeable consequences which might follow that the State de- partment objected to the Mexican laws. The Mexican secretary of state, however, has ignored this viewpoint. He regards the lands and petroleum laws as being neither harmful nor provocative. Despite this deadlock, however, there is no crisis at the present time, nor is one probable until at least the laws become effective. In the mean- time, all that can be done is to continue negotiations with the hope that some settlement will be effected before it becomes necessary to advance con- crete cases. WILL HE REPEAT With President Coolidge preparing his annual message to Congress, the situation created by the return of a hostile Senate and by the organiza- tion of opposition on the farm relief and tax reduction issues is becoming, more intense and interesting. As is presaged by these conditions, the chief executive's abilities will be severely tested in the next session of Congress. Indication of the outcome of this situation as well as of the trend of the President's own political destinies will be significantly given by his communication which will be transmitted to the national legislatureJ on Dec. 7. Political observers recall the Cool- idge message in 1923 which downed all rivals for the 1925 presidential nomination for which the New Eng- lander had previously been conceded little chance. The question now is- whether he can duplicate his per- formance; whether he can present hisj farm relief proposal and his tax re- bate plan so convincingly that public support will rush to him and his op- ponents will be disarmed. CHICAGO CHICAGO, Nov. 21.-The South Park Commissioners won an infinite- ly large amount of advertising for the city, and the Army and Navy won nothing but a lot of hard knocks in today's battle. Winter came in sec- ond, ahead of the service teams, scor-' ing one million frozen toes. The Navy's persistent goat threat- ened to butt the Mule into Lake Mich- igan in the first period, but slipped on a chunk of ice after going ten blocks. Violent bucking by the Mule brought them back to where they started, and the half ended with the Mule's tail tied in a knot around the Goat's horns, and both shivering. * ** Harry Wilson, jockey for the cadets, got a lead of 7 shivers in the third quarter, but a lake breeze got behind the midshipmen, and they shivered right into a tie. The Mule tried to kick in the last period, but bi foot was frozen in the ice before he could get started. * * * One hundred thousand people are now more convinced than ever that the Soldiers' Field stadium wasn't built for football. * * * Since they couldn't decide anything in football, the cadets and midship- men vied in dancing at the Drake last night. The ladies won. S* * * THE COACHES PONDER A New York headline Friday--"Big Ten Elevens May Have To Oppose Each Other After Coaches Meet To- day." Well, they did schedule one or two games between Conference teams, in spite of the difficulty of doing so caused by such arrangements as the New Big Three, Indiana, Purdue, and Harvard. * * * Northwestern, in a special message to Rolls, expressed regret that they could not play Michigan and Minne- sota. They explained that having cleaned up the Big Ten (as they put it), they were after New Worlds to conquer. Thus they edged in on the Rock Mountain Conference by sign- ing up with Utah. Probably the mountaineers will not allow them to slip in any more, being desirous of keeping the championships for their Mormons and salt-diggers. El Espectador. * *' * YIFNIF SPEAKING, IN ATLANTA We cull the following notice from the "Tables for Two" department of "The New Yorker:" "The B. and G. Sandwich shop, oil Fifty-ninth street jnst wes of Nadi- son ave., is a rather aimusing plate to have your three o'clock hbreakfast." These B. and G. boys are certainly live wires. Imagine! First they gof in for journalism and now its restau_- anteuring. Enterprise? My word!c And how nice it must be for Mich- AiD DRAMA THISfl AFTERNOOiN: Th Faculty Concert at 4:15 o'lvc in 11ll audi- torum. TOMORROW NIGHT: :foriz Rosen- thal, pianist, in the second program of the Choral Union Series at 3 o'cloctk ht Hi ll a ditorium.. * * * "T LE GIWATV T E )PTATIONS" A Review, by Robet Wetel In order to beguile the Butter and Egg Man on their native heath, The Messrs Shubert, those attentive ven- dors of theatricals, have translated from the market-places of Man- hattan to the drear fastnesses of the West, another of the Gargantuan re- vues which their show-shops turn out full-panoplied on, one suspects, the hour and the half-hour. The Shuberts are easily the Ringlings of the danc- ing-masters, and their shows the three-ring circuses of the bacchanals. Affable juggernauts, the Shubertian revues glide fleetly along on bearings well greased with the banana-oil of Broadway-expensively sybaritic, in- frequently beautiful, never witty or charming, always rowdy and vulgar1 in a jovial 18th Century fashion. "The Great Temptatieus," now at the Shubert-Detroit, is, like the pre- vious tenants of the Winter Garden, a lavish doll, glib and nimble, con- fected of frills and laces and silken elegancies, yet unmistakably stuffed with sawdust-an amiable monster, it is fearsome in size, but mentally just a great big child. A raffish, if prodi- gal, divcrtisement, making, like its predecessors, saucy snoots at the decencies, it is, one surmises, not so much iniquitous as it is merely ill- bred. The comedy is, as usual, Cro-Mag- non, not to say Pliocene. Mr. BillyB. Van, an aged, hoarse and quite inde- fatigable zany, is the chief comic, and very little of that. He contributes to the revelry, his habitual dusty shennanigans, risible at that time which our son-writers so feelingly refer to as When Grandma Was a Girl. The regnant ditty of the proceeding is, by the way, the formidable "Va- lencia," a lay which one fancied to be hitherto defunct, even in these pro- vinces. Resuscitated by a smoothly analgesic orchestra in a resplendent episode, it evinces itself a lusty corpse, still alive, not to mention kicking. An ensemble of gracile choristers that is Sears-Roebuck in its extent, disport themselves in the customary jigs and sarabands. The Shubert Freres, thoughtful and prudent huck- sters of the flesh-pots, have also vouchsafed the customers the wonted number of impudent, if personable, hussies, parading in coy display of their architecture. A gracious note in the program enunciates that the costumes are by Weldy of Paris, thus aptly correcting those cautions but BOOKS Travel - Poetry - Plays - Fiction - Biographies A Very Complete Stock of the Latest and Best Books.-- At Both Ends of The Di gor az SERVICE You might suggest a Pen and Pencil or Rdr a % oro I RemgtonTypewriter at where you get real sc.r , SERVICE -f I i °, BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER THOMAS D.OLMSTED. JR. Advertising..............Paul WV. Atifd Advrtiing...........illamC. Pusch Advertisi g...............Thomas Sunderland Advertising..........George It. Annable, Jr. Circulation..... ....... Kenneth. Haven Publication.............John H. Bobrink Accounts.............rancis A. Norquist Assistants George Ahn Jr. L. J. Van Tuyl Melvin 11. Baer J. 1B. Wood I). M. Brown Esther Booze Al. It. Cain Iilda. Binzer -aniel Finley Dorothy Carpenter I>. H..lHandley Marion A. Daniel A. A. Hinkley Beatrice Greenberg E. L. Hulse Selma M. Janson S. Kerbawy Mfarion Kerr R. A.Aleyer Marion L. Reading Harvey Rosenblum Ilarmiet C. Smith William F. Spencer Vance Solomon Harvey Talcott Florence Widmaier Sunday Dinner, 1 :00 to 2:30 Tea, 4:00 to 8:00 Appointments 'for Special Parties Qhiffrt ebne lb- Harold Utley SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1926 Night Editor----CASAM"A. WILSON THE 192 SCHEDULE Five of the strongest teams in the Conference will meet the Maize and Blue in 1927, according to the sched- ule drawn up by Big Ten coaches. Wisconsin will open the season for the University eleven on Oct. 15, Ohio' State follows on the 22nd, Illinois on Oct. 29, Chicago on Nov 5, the Navy on Nov. 12, with Minnesota conclud- ing the series on Nov. 19. The Var- sity will have an exceedingly difficult schedule, meeting as it does no single team which will be defeated until the final whistle blows. Coach Yost has seldom failed to schedule the best teams in the Confer- ence-or at least those which would consent to meet his elevens. The 1927 schedule is no exception. Though the prospects for a championship team next fall are not as bright as they might be, Mr. Yost has agreed to meet the strongest in the Conference-a challenge to the prospective Varsity and, as well, to the loyalty of Uni- versity supporters to follow the team regardless of games won or lost. ONE-MAN CAUCUS A one-man caucus is about to be held by Senator Henrik Shipstead, one and only Farmer-Labor member of the Senate. Shipstead holds the bal- ance of power since the Republicans number forty-eight and the Democrats forty-seven. And as Shipstead has not1 yet decided just what party he will support in the coming session hel might well hold a "party" caucus to! formulate "party" opinion. After deciding that he himself con- stitutes a qlorum, that the attendance is one hundred per cent, that the "party" agrees on everything, that he himself controls it, that there is no prospect of a split within the "ranks," that the "party" though small isI amazingly compact, the caucus (or Mr. Shipstead) could adjourn to wait1 dlevelcpments for, that is apparently what the "party" will do. DEADLOCKED Still unsettled, the dispute between Mexico and the United States growing4 i CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. "ACUTE" To The Editor: In your Wednesday's editorial or the acute situation in China, you seemed to have not made a deep stud3 of the causes that have created thc preseit situation. You were of the opinion that the foreign powers are justified in not relinquishing their extra-territorial rights in China as long as disorder exists there. But should China alone be blamed for not being able to bring about internal or- der and peace? Have the foreign powers no share in the blame? In my previous communication to The Daily and in the article of mine which ap- peared in "Chimes" some time ago, I pointed out how the various foreign powers have adopted as their cardinal policy to China to encourage the vari- ous military factions to fight against each other by offering them assist- ance, military, financial, political or otherwise and also giving them refuge and protection if they were defeated.! Thomas Millard, a veteran American press correspondent in China, wrote a very long news article in the New York Tiimes a few weeks ago, in which he gave a very vivid description of how the various foreign powers are' now rendering assistance to the war- ring factions in the present Chinese civil war. One power was said to have loaned thirteen million dollars to a Northern Chinese general to help him carry on his campaign against the Cantonese army. One of the main causes of the prolonged civil strife in China is just due to the interference into Chinese internal politics by the foreign powers. Now these foreign powers want to blame China for a sit- uation which they themselves have de- liberately helped to create. Of course, China has herself to blame for her internal disorder. But are those for-! eign powers who have taken a large part in creating the present situation; blameless or are they in a position to blame China? Do they think they have a clear conscience? Again you seemed to have the wrong impression that only the Cantonese leaders want to have the unequal treaties abolished. But I beg to as- sure you that China may be divided as far as her internal policies are concerned. But she is as united as the United States in defending her sovereign rights. The denunciation of the Belgium treaty by the Peking government has the full-hearted en-1 1) z Y ,:: y (. r ,. t t} i Tf r i. tI I . 221 S. State St. Dial 9850 --- .--- - -- -. -~n - m the evenings dra and it'r: ! ;I s " 'and howls and whines ottside 'h indow When you are fed up on studyi ug azind are too restless to stay at home When you would like to show your little girl friend a good time --Drop in at Granger's Acad 'i' y and dance to Jack S'cotts peppy "W0iver- ines. a PA T H DONT ON T H E CAMPU'S I t I I: I igan students in New York city to untutored attendants' who had infer- drop in at that place around on Fifty- red that they were by Mennen of ninth street and meet all the Build- Ne i wark. ing and Grounds crowd from Ann Ar- bor. I suppose the decorations are "THE TOJcIT BEARERS" maize and blue. Or have the B. and ]Due to the inability of Helen G. boys any official colors? Anyway, Osborn to continue in the role of Mrs. let's all patronize the B. and G. iPampinelli in the Play Production Sandwich shop when we go to New Classes' presentation of George Kel- New York and help the old gang ley's "The Torch Bearers" which will along. be given Wednesday night in Univer- Yifhf, sity hall, Phyllis Loughton has been * * * cast in that part. Aquatic l'ootball * * * LAKE TILLOTSON, Nov. 27.--A IjPAUL WIITEMAN new style of football will be necessary e { A -R elnew, by M11orrls Zwerdlang next year in the new Tillotson stadi-- um, Coach Yost has decided. Paul Whiteman, "Monarch of Jazz," * * * has packed up his instruments and de- The team will wear water wings camped to another city with his play- instead of shoulder pads, and combi- ers after crowding the new Michigan npea r and sangcas. theater of Detroit with jazz lovers nation headgear and swimming caps.foawek The officials will go around in row- or a week. boats and the yell leaders will per- Those who came to the theater in an- boatos rngbrd.iiatn of hearig a ravig, moan- ingboards. band of musicia'ns pound out wild melodies to a rhythm which would{ !Buoys will be substituted for goal mlde oaryh hc ol os, will tbe substituted foragoal keep their feet incessantly tapping in posts, and the stands will be placed time were disappoited. But those I on rafts. Ferry service will be main- twined from the junction of Packardelderly persons who came somewhat skeptically to discover what appeal and Main, by means of swift excur- sionstae. these exponents of jazz could hold *steamers. for their children were as pleasantly surprised as the former were disap- Varsity football men are to train Ispied sr r under the direction of the swimmingi ntr coach next fall. The Athletic asso- which was symphonic in nature, at ciation promises that all bondholders times. The most critical lover of the classics would have been forced to level. admit that there was something in T______y__ _ y. it possessed, at least, of great possi- bilities. The selections ranged from Chinese nation that they will en- Gershwin's beautiful "Rhapsody in I counter. Blue," which Whiteman declares is a The talk of armed intervention milestone in native American music, might have been able to scare the to the snappy "How Many Times" and Chinese people ten or fifteen years smooth moving "Moonlight on theE ago. But not now. Times have Ganges." changed. The Chinose nomnle haveI' A -.A i-1 f-, ,< - ,i -I - - I Afternoon Teas - - Lunches.. inners 225 S. Thayer Tel. 3941 OIC m GAMMfL OMPANY NEW NAVY EVER OCKS I Fiv AE' ot biv 'domwAft AV '1 9 rn. a 1 _ fl r5 f Dancing Wednesday, Friclay 'id Sa ,urday ° m m m ~1 ." ".r .0./:i .dll..d',Air. .o+' .E . ", ":1 w .. " " '"', "'°.1 ".1:"s ." e i -TI kE a 4, r ,y c'"i'y t' .. ,r ;1 r -,4 ;f k ;E , F ' P , y . '. ' k P, L Y ! 'y"39 r y .t+tr t i , 7 F i, For real Quality Service and a Thorough Cleansing of Your Garments with '4 RLO, pn ' ' 4,r. i i i' " a va r 1 1 ~_ }¢ y -1 F w j N '33 AA Modern Equipped Plant with Eery Facility ' j . r ,. t'd 3 4.' -J I E to handle any article. out of the Mexican land and petroleum dorsement of the Cantonese govern- laws seems to be deadlocked. In two ment as shown by the recent state- notes to the Calles government, Sec- ment issued by the Cantonese leader, retary Kellogg has objected to these Chang Kai-shek. To liberate China1 laws as retroactive and confiseatnrv from the domination and onnrcesson gY,,ig,~ .4 i