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November 30, 1926 - Image 4

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1926-11-30

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PACE 'F017R

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, 'NOVE YTRMI, ',(I.

a.GEau acv..TUDAY;NOVEMBn'a . O, 192(

that foreign jurisdiction should be re-
moved. .
It should be remembered, however,
Published every morning except Monday that this plan is now merely theI
during the University year by the Board ia
Control of Student Publications. recommendation of a commission. Be-.
Members of Western Conference Editorial fore inauguration, it must be con-
Association. . sidered and adopted by 13 world pow-I
The Associated Pss is exclusively en- ers as well as by the Chinese. Never-
titled to the use for republication of all news theless, as it is notably fair, favorable
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and the local news pub- consideration should be granted to it.
lished therein.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, RUSSIAN TAXES
Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate
of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- Characterizing the measure asc
master General.
Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail, necessary to the bringing about ofI
$4.o00
fices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- complete "socialization," the Soviet
nard Street. lias announced a new policy of taxing
Phones: Editorial, 4925; business 21214. private business. It is planned to tax
private enterprise just short of the1

stated that So-and-so had oils in the lii Iiii
exhibition, and So-and-so had water ;s=cv
colors, and let it go at that. Now this M G .0 i9 JA W S
is neither good crticism nor good re- AND
porting, but only good evasion. Are
BOOKS
we, in a university which claims D R A M A
an interest in literature, science, and __ _
"the arts," to be reduced to accepting ROSENTHA Travel - - - Fiction - B
undergraduate criticism as lacking in --j-- Poetry - PlaysFiographies
all pretensions as this? Is "merely A revi*ew, by PIhlihi Brooks A Very Complete Stock of the Latest and Best Books.
listing the works, making no mention Moriz Rosenthal may not hold the
of technique or theory," enough on a reputation as the World's greatest}a
campus which boasts courses in Es- technician which he had in his twen-(17
thetics, in Fine Arts, and in the prac- ties, but certainly he is a master ofI.-
Iice of Drawing, Painting and Design? mechanical skill. On his second tour At Both E is of The Di .goniL1
of America after an absence of sixteen -
thstwe choose between reticence of years, he coses to us with all the per-
sort, and absurdity-which your fection of technique, all the muscular
correspondent perhaps lightly thinks ability which anyone could hope for.
springs front rather limited knowl- But happily Rosenthal does not, like SERVICE
edge coupled with quite unlimited ar- the young and ambitious virtuoso,r
~ogance? If so, I for one would make his skill an object for exhibi-
. .tion He uses it as a means for ob-
choose absurdity, Jfor it is at least tin. H ust asa enso ob
.mediverting reading.., It_ provokes taning a most beautiful expression,wfoa
employs it in feeling out the utmost
discussion, as witness the present -. it l d

I I

I

EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR
SMITH H. CADY, JR.
Editor................W. Calvin Patterson
City Editor............... .Irwin A. Olian
e s it s..........ick Shillito
NewsEditrs..........Philip C. Brooks
Women's Editor......... Marion Kubik
Sports Editor............Wilton A. Simpson
Telegrap~sh Lbt ............Morris Zwerdling
Music and Drarna........Vincent C. Wall, Jr.
Night Editors

limit which would compel it to shut
down. On the other hand, coopera-
tive and state enterprises will remain
lightly taxed, to the disadvantage of
private business.{
Bt thprk r r e.r rtain. ostacles in!

4

Chars B ehioct
Carlton tiaroe
ameChambeei al
Assista
Carl Burger
Josel
e'taron Anderson
Alhx clloc1":oviski
Jean Cuiii'bell
Clarence P(lcisof
wViiom ml'ierv
Al :ed 1 ce Ioste
)obert I. Finch
j in IFirnd
t hitGssner
Elain. Gruber
eans 1. Glenc
im vey J. Gunde
Stewart l1ookcer
"' ErvIn"I . love

Ellis Merry
StanfordrN. Phelps
Courtland C. Smith
C ssait A. Wilson
nt City Editors
Ilenry Thurnau
ph Brunswick
Reporters
NR ies Kimball
li hron Mrshthaumn
Richard Kurvink.
C.i,'Tonas Mcbean
Adeline O'Brien
r Kenneth Patrick
Morris Quinn
Jameis Sheehan
N. J. Smith
Syria Stone
er Vilani Thurnau
rson Milford Vanik
Herbert Vedder
\iMariall Welles
Thaddeus Wasielewski
,Sherw )od XWinslow

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 21214
BUSINESS MANAGER
THO 1AS D. OLMSTED, JR.
Advertising.............. Paul W. At.tvid
Advertising...............William C. Pusch
Ad ver tisil g.................homas Sunderland
Advertising ...........George ..Annable, Jr.
Circulation.................T. Kenneth Haven
Pulication.............. ...J(ohn II. Bobrink
Accounts. ...... Francis A. Norquist
Assistants
George Ali Jr. L. J:dVan Tuyl
Melvin 11. Baer J. B. Wood
I). M. Brown Esther Booze
M. II. Cain Klida Binzer
Danicl Finley Dorothy Carpenter
B. 1. Handley Marion A. Daniel
A. iAl. IHinkley Beatrice Greenberg
Et. L. tHulse Selmna M. Janson
S.Kerbawy :Marion Kerr
R. A. Aeyer 1arion L. Reading
Harvey Rosenblum Harriet C. Smith
Wili:am F. Spencer Nance Solomon
arvey Talcott Florence Widmaier
lI.rcld lUtley
TUES:I AY, NOVEMBER 30, 1926
Night Editor-CHAS. E. BEHYMER

CuL Lere ar e acO6~k1Z c
the way of the success of. the new
policy. In the first place, business in,
Russia has learned.by costly experi-1
ence not to lay all of its cards. on the
table. It has resorted to fictitious co-
operatives or works hand in hand with'
state controlled enterprises. In the
second place, it has learned to dis-
guise its profits until they appear al-
most as losses. Business has "gone
underground." Finally, the tax will
be merely passed on to the consumer
-which means the masses-already'
suffering from such burdens. SomeI
maintain that the limit beyond which
the masses can pay has already been
reached.1
Apparently Soviet officials have not]
yet learned that cheap production andI
high wages are infinitely preferable
to dear production and low wages. It
is likely that the new ruling will have
a no more successful career than have
had many of its predecessors.
COLLEGE 31MLSOPS
"The coonskin coat, soft leather
chairs, waiters, and bids to house par-
ties . ... threaten the hardness of the
modern University man," in the opin-
ion of Reverend Boyd Edwards, 'who
spoke at the annual convention of fra-
ternity men 'held last week in New
York.
Immediately the college men threw
away their fur coats, bought hard
chairs, and sent their regrets to all
hostesses, in the fit of sincere abash-
ment at ever having participated in'
such luxuries. Such things should be
abolished, according to the good di-
vine, and so the college students willI
not only abandon them but also the
printed text book, the electric study
lamp, and the steam heated room-
all these things were undoubtedly

case, and it may by revealing to him
hfl 'on ignorance, help to educate
the critic Ignorance, if the one pos-
sessing it ever hopes to learn, is per-
hays better'revealed than kept out of

S
I

sight.,; Stillit may be questioned
whether the critical columns of aI
capius publication are exactly the
place for this educative display of
ignorance on the part of the critic.
Nevertheless' one cannot but reward
the. Chimes writer for one of his
absurdities by pointing out to him
thattlie top and bottom rims of a jar
or vase as seen in perspective are not
and cannot be parallel, and that even,
if they were it-would not be a difficult
matter for the artist to represent
them 'so.
The disadyantage of the arrogantj
method of criticism is that it throws
such a ,nercile'ss light upon the per-
sonality of the critic; he commits
himself so utterly that his strength
or his weaknesses are wholly revealed.
If our young Writers insist upon being
arrogant, they would do well to be
lees ignorant. My plea is not for more
reticent critics or for more arrogant
ones, but only for more. intelligent
ores. -. -Jean Paul. Slusser.E
CHINA MISUNDERSTOOD
To The Editor.:
After reading the editorial whicht
appeared in the Wednesday's Daily
under the title of "Acute," I feel that
the Editor is a little bit unnecessarily
over-worried and has gone one step
further towards misunderstanding
and misrepresenting the Chinese sit-
guatiofv at present: If he is at sll a
scholarly' student, a student eager for
the.,-truth, this must be due to the in-,

of the spirit of exquisite me o ls.
It is well to remember that Rosen-
thal is 64, a magic number as it would

You mlight suggest a'
dier "Master e "
A Wahl or Conklin Set
Pen and Pencil or
Remington Port -
Typewriter at
Rider's Pa She
where you get real service
SERVICE

'r
'}

.MoIriz Rosenthal

seem, since Schumann-Heink was that
age when she made her last stupend-
ous triumph in Ann Arbor. Yet he
f demonstrates a physical vigor which
is amazing. Rosenthal must have
brought from central Europe some of
the rigid physical training for which
the Germanic peoples are famous, for
his physique is that of a man of forty.
The shoulders of a blacksmith and the
chest of a wrestler combine to give
h i m a n appearance of gigantic
strength.
The very contrast between that ap-
pearance and the delicate touch of
his playing, mare up the real char-
acter of his work. Without the slight-
est ostentation he sits down and seems
to think out the feeling of the pieces
he plays, and port ys it with admira-
le sncerity. Fa :mating trills, dif-
fcult..zi's, ,alda perfect staccato,
all ar-e but p arts _oflils nmethod of pro-
ducing the effects lbe, seeks.
But the primary achievement of his

"' Co . . tl~
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 741
DLES

Something Different
People's moods are about as changeable as the
weather and recreations that please them once, fail
to satisfy another time. That is why you often hear
them say: "Let's do something different tonight."
- Your best bet is Granger's-congenial crowd,
- peppy music, and equipment planned for your
comfort.
Dancing Wednesday, Friday, Saturday.
TnTsysm C LOTTThS
Fear YQun4 Men,,'U Aged:

f

,y

'I

sufficiency of
.eptdgatu.the

his limited time to
true conditions and

CHICAGO'S RETURN luxuries also in the'day of1
Next November Michigan and Chi- ister, and all were probablyI
.as producing"milksops."
cago will renew the football relation- a oduin y myksopm."
Modern youth may be moll
ships broken off in 1920; Yost and but fur coats are warm, an
Stagg, the oldest mentors in the Con- chairs are comfortable; in
ference, will meet again; and alumni what speakers at fraternity
of both schools will hark back to the tions may say. There is no r
days when football was young, and the condemn a thing for being
" Ch " tsive, and though there has
phrase "Michigan at Chicago meant sivsand though ther ha
the classic of the West. constant tendency. toward eff
It was in 1905 that the Wolverines, since our ancestors cleared
one of Yost's greatest teams, had won ests, we must advance.
twelve straight games, scoring 505
points to 0 for their opponents. They BETTER FOREIGN SER
met Chicago in the thirteenth game of As Consul General Robert I
the season, and the final score was ner left Paris last week ab
Chicago 2, Michigan 0. History was Orient Express bound ror ar
made on that field, and respect for in Athens-that of United Sta
Chicago, doped to lose then as it will ister to Greece-the first ir
be in 1927, remains unchanged at. application of the Rogers Ac
Michigan. was being put into effect. 'I
There are other Michigan-Chicago which combined the consul
games that stand out in -Wolverine diplomatic services into one
football history-the first game, back Service" was worthily crea
in 18)1, won by 'Chicago 10 to 0; the now such men as Mr. Kisner
1398 battle, won by Michigan 12 to 11; in the consular service, can
the 1904 game-Michigan 22, Chicago ministerships and ambassa
12. They have always been great foot- making of the United States c
ball gaines; it is with pleasure,'that something more than a pass'
Michigan welcomes Chicago back to visas office.

the min-
lamented
ycoddled,
d leather'
spite of
conven-s
reason to
progres-
been a
feminaey I
the for-
fI

follow. the very rapid developments in
that country., I shall not blame himj
too much because that can only be
i nnn i ,.nn ri ,nP nt~rof n nnrc nn .ri

1'

VICE
Piet Kis-
oard the
new post.
ates Min-
mportant
t of 1924
That act,
lar and
"Foreign
ated, for
, trained
step into
Aorships,
consulate
port and

I

hart is te exquisite, pianissimo whicn
periodical-, of a high standard besides embodies all the thoughtful spirit of
a few biased local papers and poor his playing. Thr ughdut his entire
magazines that carry no higher aims performance, thr e keeps' recurring'
than those of commercialism, this softness. which carries the audi-'
The Editor does not know what the ence into an almost visible quiet-a
an s Gnsilence which in itself has a spiritE
"Cantonese Government' is, nor what adacaatr
it represents. All his conceptions Espchactes.
abou it re gt~tn frm th vaoe Epecially pleasing in Mr. Rosen-
about it are gotten from the vavruethal's program last night were the
daily news which is dominated by the Chopin "Nocturne" and "Etudes," the
British-a bitter enemy of China. Liadow "Music Box," and the Liszt
The "so-called "Cantonese Govern- "Hungarian Rhapsody." The latter"
ment" should be called the New showed to the highest degree his sin-
Chinese Government, because it really cerity in bringing out the utmost
had:the whole nation at its back. It is beauty in the work of the composer-
the government of the Chinese, by the who had been his teacher ashis
Chinese, and for the Chinese. Its **dy
leaders, who are carrying out the will I THE FACULTY CONCERT
of the people, are honorable states-
men, patriotic and honest. They are A review, by D. A. Iohn
not "red" nor "bolshevistic" but pure The fourth concert of the Faculty
and simpl sons of China. The new series Sunday afternoon, though un-
government sets as its aim to estab- usually long, was rather interesting.
fish a strong, orderly, centralized gov- A string quartet, composed of S. P.
enent; to free her people from both 'Lockwood, first violin, Angelina Lock-
wood, second violin, P~auline Kaiser,!
the present military rule of her own, viola, sand antte'Fre, 'ello, ae,
and the unjust, unhumane, oppressive, viola and Janette'Fraser, 'cello, gave
and imperialistic powers of the West. as the first number Schubert's "Quar-
rit~ a. LnvP-rnImn~nt ni l,1 not onlyf tet D minor, Op. posth." Admirable
StLUL 0 5U VCI AIIUIIU .~t 1A~A JS~t t~ l

READ THE WANT ADS

M AKE-
PATH S
O uN T H E
cA Pus

L "U" PRINCETON-A true collegiate model, istapily distinguished
as it specimen of super-styling for the colege man,
309
S. Main

I-

.ar~~u at,.xrcu rcavaxo vaxw v ~ govel11c t lu m lt ly
her old place on the Wolverine sched- Although there are yet, and prob- be admired but encouraged by any spirit in the last movement made up
ule. ably will long be, many great ambas- human being if he is looking for a bet- in part for the dragging of the' An-
sadorships that remain political ter world 'for tomorrow. But it is dante Con Moto. One may admire the
POINTING THE WAY plums, there are many other so-called Iuripus to see, that the Western pow- technique of the first violinist, even
In view of the chaotic civil war con political plums that the merit system ers who criticise the present military though his tone is often thin and
<i ins in China which have involved has vastly improved. Such improve- rule of China so much, when they see squeaky.
world powers possessing special priv- ment is inevitable in the new Foreign i the new one coming they begin to AMadame Zagorska, in a group of
ileges, the report of the 13-power 'Service.check it by the threatening of armed three swags, displayed a pleasing
commission onextra-territoriality of- intervention. Nay! Nay! The powers voice, which has volume and clarity.
extr-teritoralit I-Ir numbers were: Aria from "Son-
fcra ;n irmoved outlook toward re- CAMPUS OPiNION hate done so, only the Editor has so
i i.mn with that country. Anon ymoos comlnunications will be feared! hoped! or imagined! nambula" by Belii; Spring Song
mpro- isregarded. The names of communi- In regard to the abrogation of the by Chopin; and an aria from "La
cants will however, be regarded Dame des ignes"byTschaikovsky.
gressive surrender of extra-territorial I confidential upon request. unequal treaties, I beg to remind the
rights as fast as China is able to in- Editor; that it is not only the aim of The viola with its sombre and mel-
sure adequate protection to foreigners. IGNORANT CRITICS the "Cantonese Government" but of ancholy tone is seldom used as a solo
This, she must do by bettering her To The Editor: lhe whole Chinese people at its back. instrument, but in combination with
legislative and judicial machinery, and The writer of the communication in And that government is not saying other strings is often beautiful and
by preventing executive interference Thursday's Daily entitled "Critical that we want to abolish them even adequately expressive. The sextet,
with justice. For the period during Reporters" seemed to mie unusually, i we cannot protect the foreigners in composed of the string quartet, viola
whijhaththese improvements are being pessimistic in this subject. He cited our country. They are only saying and piano, with S. P. Lockwood play-
made, the report also provides for co- the recent Chimes article on the art that we will surely do so when we get ing the viola, gave the exquisite
operation between Chinese and for- exhibition as a terrible example of into control of the whole country, "Scene Andalouse" by Turina. Albert
eign judicial systems. Provision is the arrogant type of criticism common which will naturally mean peace and Lockwood's piano accompaniment
at te prsent ime.with its meandering background for
made particularly for cases which in- on the campus at 'the present time order and perfect protection for every-
volve natives and foreign citizens and he says he prefers to it the re- body's right under Chinese rule. "If the strings was strangely reminiscent
jointly. ticent variety which makes no pre- the -antonese leader keeps his prom- of mountains and valleys.
The cmmisson'sThe concluding number of the long
The commission's report is valuable tensions and displays no ignoraice. 1sev' as the Editor says, the world--
in definitely pointing the way to set- Most ,of us, I suppose,-have suffered if it is at all humane-will have only program was a group of three songs
tlement of a troubled situation. If a good deal of late through -n Qeer- to., welcome the new government and by Mr. Wyszatycki, whose lyric tenor
successful, it will abolish extra-terri- dose of the cocksure imitation- 'willingly or unwillingly give up all its stirred the ear. He . sang "Licha
. Mont-iro. nk. u iri e , +nthi-lO ind .- rnrl a -ei a - - -,,an_ Sinierci" by Gall; "Piosnka Dudavza"

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