THE MICHIGAN DAILY ThURSDAY, DE1CEM 2, 1)2 / -, I if, I , Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board i Control of Student Publications. Menbvrs of Western Conference Editorial Association. flhe Associated Pfess 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 t;ssistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail, Vices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phrns;reditorial, 4925; business 2124. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR SMITH H. CADY, JR. Editor.................W. Calvin Patterson City Editor............... .rwin A. Olian News Editors.............Philip C. birooks Women'sditor Marion Kubik Sports Editor............. Wilton A. Simxpson Telegraph Editor...........Moris Zwerding Music and Drama.......Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Night Editors Charle s Plehymer Ellis Merry Calton Chanmpe Stanford N. Phelps o Camberlin Courtland C. Smith James Herald Cssam A. Wilson Assistant City Editors Chrl Burger Henry Thurnau Joseph Brunswick Reporters Maren Anderson Paul Kern Alex Bochnowski Miles Kimball Jean Campbell Milton Kirshaum Clarence Edelson Richard Kurvink. Chester 1. Clark G. Thomas McKean hart W. Deg La VergneKenneth Patrick William IE,uerv Morris Quinn Alfred Lee Foster James Sheehan Bob rt L. Finch Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Solin Friend Sylvia Stoe Zobei t tessner William Thurnu Elaine Crniber d iford Vaik olamaaJ. Glencer Herbert r.kVedder JIm vey j. Gunderson Marian Welles Stewart llooker Thaddeus Wasielewski Morton B. eone Sherwood Winslow BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER PAUL W. ARNOLD Advertising...............William C. Pusch Advertising. ..............Thomas Sunderland Advertising...........eorge11. Annable, Jr. Circulation................T. Kenneth Haven Publication.................John H. Bobrink Accounts...............Francis A. Norquist Assistants George Ahn Jr. Harold Utley Melvin H. Baer L. . Van ruyl . Al. Brown J. B. Wood M. 1I. Cain Esther Booze Floreoce Cooper liilda Binzer Daniel Finley Dorothy Carpenter B. i. Handley Marion A. Daniel A. M. Hinkley 1eatrice Greenberg E. L. Hulse Selma M. Janson S. Kerbawy Marion Kerr R. A. Mbeyer :Marion L. Reading Harvey Rosenbum Harriet C. Smith William F. Spencer Nance Somon H arvey Talcott Florence Widmaier THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1926 Night Editor-JO H. CHAMBERLIN A PERSONAL WELCOME For the avowed purpose of achieving a spiit of cooperation among our col- lege students, of developing under- standing between students in America and foreign countries, and of further- ing an intelligent student opinion on questions of national and world im-~ portance, the National Student Fed- eration will open its sessions here to- day in the earnest endeavor to achieve these aims. It goes without saying that the great national sand inteo:aational problems of the day need intelligent solution as never before. Though a bit over- whelming in importance, depth, and comlexity, theze problems must be met. Who is more capable of formu- lating intelligent opinion for their so- lution than the unprejudiced but in- formed students of our universities? Such epinion should have great influ- ence. To the federation which is striving to formulate student opinion, we extend our thanks-and personal welcoe. INLAND WATERWAYS Indefatigables who have spent time and money for the promotion of in- land waterways have finally had their has awarded only six letters to seniors of this year's team and has put on probation, all other members of the varsity who were eligible for letters, with the condition that if they make a better showing next year, they will receive two letters at that time. The actions of these two coachesj give opponents of football a chan(ce to again take up their cudgels against the game; a choice opportunity for which they have long been waiting. Why should a team go unrewarded for its work throughout the season, simply because it did not win games?t No doubt, every varsity football play- er realizes his responsibility when he I is representing his school, and knows what is expected of him, but simply because he was unable to overcome aC stronger opponent, does not prove that he was not trying his utmost. The decision of Coach Ilinkle, that "this year's team must 'produce the goods' next year of forfeit its letters,"l especially noticeable as putting the entire game of football on a "win or lose" basis.I If it were shown that the playersi had broken training rules, acted in-t differently while playing, or other- wise disgraced themselves, the actions of the coaches might have had some excuse, but as the situation now stands, it is a black eye to the game of football. TE EXCEPTION Following a long campaign againsta the Ku Klux Klan and corruption,t George R. Dale, publisher of Muncie,l Indiana, has announced that he will either "sell or give his paper away" to anyone who wants it. "I am will- ing to risk my own life and liberty fighting for any cause I may deem just, but the sacrifice is too great, now that the vengeance of the gang-1 sters is directed at my family as well1 as myself," said Dale following re- peated attacks upon his home and family.t It is easy enough to say that Dale, should carry on his campaign against corruption, it is far more difficult for him to do so. The records of those editors who have "carried on" is none too assuring. One has but to point to the tragic careers of Don R. Mellet and Carl Magee to verify this fact. The fortunate thing is that so many editors have fought against what they con- sidered wrong and unjust in spite of tremendous personal risk. Dale is an exception. THIE MAI HAN The holiday spirit is rife in the land; and on Christmas day every possible service will be curtailed in order that no one will have to work. The mailman will have completed his heaviest week of the year, delivering postal cards from nephews to aunts and five year olds to their teacherst and high gchool girls to their youth- ful swains. One would think that this would be the day of days to give the mailman a rest; but Harry S. New, postmaster1 general, one of the long line of that species that is chosen for its lack of knowledge of the postoffice and its ability to carry Indiana, has announc- ed otherwise. The mailman will de- liver as usual, says he, in order that the service to the public may not be curtailed. One would think that the welfare of the country depended upon the de- livery of the picture post card; and that people with important matter to send would not have sense enough to mail it special delivery anyway, which would insure its delivery. Persons with the uniutelligence to mail a post- card to their respective teachers or sweethearts or so forth the day before Christmas deserve to have a low mark or a blighted romance. "DYNAA!C DETROIT" ;'"1 it111N 11111 11Ill 'I II IlIIIllIIII111111111111fIlIlI IIitifi i111 IIIII Il 1111101111 IIII111611111 1 ltll1 11' I1 -- NA DRAMAGR . ra i UUMN1' RIOT - __ -_____-_ Students who were absent from T tcR;EA nERS- TraVei - Oetry - Piays - Fiction - Biographies classes yesterday had the perfectly A Reilei , By ennieth Patritkuwef' valid . reuse that they were out hunt- In the words of Mrs. J. Duro Pampi- *ey 02 tOSok0 OLtst lt etBOS ing President Little's dog, one Clippy. nelli-"Surprise." Despite a slightly * * * unfavorable and pessimistic attitude A e Up street and down al'ey--if they on the part of the audience at the be- ginning of the first act, Play Produc- + ° J.~~ have such things in this town-stu- d At Bo h Ends of The s m tion and Direction put through its - dents chased vainly after that famous !irst public presentation of George '_________________ female blackish brindle Scottish Ter- Kelly's "The Torchbearers" in very rier. Zoology professors lectured on commendable shape. SERV!CE "Ways and Means of Identifying a For the story of the play there is o Shy and Undemonstrative Terrier." very little to say thart has not been * ft said. It combines farce, approaches to C The B. and G. Boys suspended op- slapstick, and a satirical comment up- eratiens in their radium mine and on the well meant efforts of all of us -s turned out 109 per cent for the chase. who are addicted with the desire for You might suggest * * * astounding the world at large with The police force. ordered an addi- our histjonic talent. A group of littler tional supply of tear gas and got right theater creators, headed by a self- into the fight. Of the 2,000 dogs cap- styled Messiah of the art attempts to tured, none passed the shyness test. bring before a local audience the de- * * *Wlights of' "higher comedy," and the P n n Pllo usual effets-though exaggerated for _ qWmtara¢uroses t u A ith ~1 A4 A A "I 1kJ 1'Yi) Lq.RI P 1''iit'cts"" (f~a'j(:VLLes ue. Swit other works of Kelly, a certain act is It was at the Army and Navy game lde bfohadorisumou at Chicago that our hero, J. Paul Uni- lauded beforehand for its humorous versity, first laid eyes upon this won- displacement, and then fails to meas- derfully radiant creature. She shone nrc up to the expectations of the audi- ence. In tils case the rather over- mn that sea of faces and mud like aone Inticaeherhrov- rated second act is eclipsed by both st throug th rDetroit smok. H the first and the third in terms of Sb h pleasure exacted by the ticket holders. haughty bearing squelched him like T yms IThe players soeied to be conscious of the police tear gas attack. the climaxes expec(1 of them and Suddenly towards the end of theJin otheepoise and . .1ncneunc ttepoise and third snowstorm, our. hero noticed that she was no longer with her two ability to some extent which had car- . . 'ied them lirough the first episode. elderly companions, and just then heithemcharctersher ted wid h heard a faint cry from the playing The eia vig rftw cheglossed field. He .rushed down and there be- truth and vigor, a fact which glossed . . over the few mechanical defects, andl hind an iceberg on the 50-yard line he o-rha fs wm e mh an t-d e es, r-n found her, going down for the third hat is more ipltant-were over- found .her, -done in not a single instance. Donald I time in the icy water. Lyons filled the only "straight" part An1d upon his rfrozen ear beathe in the play, that of the suffering hus- thundering herd of the approaching bnwt rsns hc etn army. What to do? band, with a freshness which left no - (Continued In Our Next) taste in the mouth of the audienee. * , * Beautifully cast as his wife was Mary Lois Gudekunst. Her treatment of RATE YOU SEEN THIS DOG? A the leading part was capable and sympathetic. As for the Bernhardtian u Mrs. Pampinelli-the most difficultI role of all--that was professionally I enacted by Phyllis Loughton, who displayed everything but the fact that Ishe had been forced to take the part Iat the last minute. Samuel Bonel, 1as the nebulous Mr. Hossefrosse, was well received, as were Robert Wetzel, Ruth McCann and Jeannette Cooper. The hand of the director, David Owen, a newcomer to the campus, could be seen throughout the perform- ance, and to his credit. That was no meanly-proportioned task which he Wanted by local authorlties. had, with the natural opposition of Description :shy and nuitdemonstra- University Hall audi orium and its tive. picturesque scenery. It portends well. ('IJ"PPY i"OUND IN IDAILY I RLANJ) hAPES Roland Hayes, Negro tenor, and one After all the fuss we made over;of the world's most famous singers I Clippy, and then there he was right thei most distinct success of his race in the same paper with us yesterday. in recent years-will appear for the "Mugwumip" sent in a clipping of . . first time in Ann Arbor Saturday eve- Clippy as he was photographed in an ning at S o'clock in Hill auditorium. advertisement in the paper yesterday. The position that Hayes now holds He writes: in the musical world is doubly phe- Dear ROLLS: nominal when the handicaps which Here we have a snapshot of your noia;hnte adcp hc Hs sy he has had to overcome are consider- much advertised dog. (NOTE: It e1. Born on a Georgia farm in abject isn't ours, though; we couldn't adver- poverty and with the prejudice of a tise in the Bulletin.) We know that p th t rdice of a 1 nation toJnv Rr UU1o P.d.i H- q -, --- typewriter at where you get r cal zc." ce Ngb-CtO$15BONSIELLEr - Mats. Tues., Thurs.:iat. .d" a CO Fg tt"ti"ais 0 o 0 s =0F PLAYHOUSE soc and 7se. MISS BO NSTE LIE PLAYS In Frances 1 Iodgsoil IIBrilett's Unusual Pay PARTY FAVORS 'A Dawn of a Tomorrow' P DANCE PROGRAMSI! PLACE CRD AND TALLIES at the MA RY LOUISE SH OP FORWARD PASS A single-breasted college coat 50 inches long. Instantly distinguished as a specimen of'super- styling. IF 'V. GROSS 309 s. } fl 1 ,fl c .4 ,i iI his name is Clippy because he needs one. Being big hearted and all that sort of thing we will donate our re- ward to the rolling Home from Ecorse. ll£ gwut p. EVERYBODY HELPS LAKE TILLOTSON, Dec. 1.--Chem-I istry department is busy trying to dis- cover something to dry up water. It is rumored that Professor Lichty has nac11 on o vercomie;uoanc Hayes has won a place through ability and the hardest work. Those who remacra- ber the stupendous sum of money that put Kansas City's pampered darling in the Metropolitan last year, the amount that was necessary for Lewis, Tibet and others to finally achieve even momentary fame, will be doubly impressed by the fact that he is a Negro who worked his way through college, wan a waiter in a Louisville elfort, crowned with success by the The star of a champion has fallen,' assurance of President Coolidge that 11and Dynamic Detroit again leads! No the Administration will stress the longer can Chicago lay claim to being completion of the "Mississippi basin the most criminal spot on the face of transportation development in the the earth, for proud sons of the motor coming session of Congress. Twelve city will rise up in indignation at the thousand miles of navigable rivers in cry. The supremacy of the Windy the whole Mississippi valley are to City is threatend--relinquished--and be improved, paving the way for Detroit reigns supreme. Middle Western prosperity by provid- The town on the banks of the drain- ing access to the Gulf for commodities age canal may keep up .its present en- produced in the interior. couraging rate 'of two or three mur- Endorsement of the project by the ders a day; but what is this to com- chief executive is a victory for those pare to the city without a drainage who have labored long for its com- canal? Did Chicago ever have a mayor o~tcuagaist pblicopinon,- ploon, often against public opinion, sent to Leavenworth for bootlegging? always challenged by rival transpor- Have Chicago bandits ever consis- tation forces. Its advocates have tently killed policemen in cold blood?j shown, with the scanty river improve- I What is a mere inter-gang murder ments already made, that it is possible compared with this? Surely, extra to transport large shipments of heavy points will have to be added to De- j freight cheaply to and from the Gulf. troit's score for its large number of With the increased use of natural murdered policemen. means of transportation, it is not im- It is without any provincialism or probable that a great change for the sectional prejudice that this chain- better will take place in the prosperity pionship is claimed. Chicago hasj of the Mississippi valley and in its been greatly over rated. Detroit is adjoining areas. the city of mass production; and1 sooner or later this must be recog- FOOTBALL LETTERS nized. Records of murders and cold; 1 i : E discovered some substance that com- night chub and a laborer in a sheet- bines with the water to make soap metal factory. and water. The engineering depart- At present, of course, there is a ment has been busy for the past week vogue for the "New Negro"-for the building dykes to hold water in the social and literary emancipation of the stadium. race. But even this was hardly re- El Tonto. sponsible for his original success six fyears ago. It was on merit that Hayes After observing the efforts of stu- won his first recognition in a London dents trying to read this paper dur- concert, and on merit alone that he Ing lectures, we have petitioned the has continued to be enthusiastically managing editor to have the Daily reviewed in every civilized country. printed on non-rustling newsprint. It may have been that same prejudice * * * that has kept Hayes out of Hill audi- COLLE(GE EI)U('ATiON VS. STUDIES torium for the last few years with We thought all discussion of the Ann Arbor clamoring for a chance to riots had been gassed out of existence, hear the lyric tenor that thrilled first but someone broke out yesterday in Europe and then America; it may in - n nr n hponc. b nf inh ilit to - A , -) i .) _ smok~gpleasure t tn a Campus Opinion regarding it. The argument presented was that the col- loge man who grows enthusiastic! enough over the team's victories to' raid a theater is nothing more nor less than a leader of a lynching party in the making. ft* k k* It is tIne we rid the CO1111111u3ity ofl such desperate characters as these college boys. They shout, march up the street, attem npt to get into a show 3 for what the picture is actually wortih, and generally act as if this weren't! n xins v i # r.wal~~}.t-1i[xn ..n] n ' a .'e eC1 en ecau O na DIy LO 2r-7# range a suitable date. But in any1 event tae initial concert of the artist is of paramount interest to all mu- sical lovers in time city. An analysis of the voice that has made Hayes famous or even of the technique of his performance is difli-- cult. He sings in five languages with perfect expression-opera arias, clas- sical and folk selections from the French, German, English, Italian and Spanish. And on the same program will be found a series of Negro spirituals that Europe found the most H ERE is the outstanding fact of the entire cigarette industry: Camels never tire the taste, no mat- ter how liberally you smoke them; never leave a cigaretty after-taste. Only the choicest tobaccos that nature produces, only the finest blending ever given a cigarette could produce a smoke that never fails to please, that always brings the utmost in smoking enjoyment. Regardless of how often you want Camel' will neve i. faal ye , nver give you any bu t finest ti ci smoking pleasure. That ;.:- Cw syC - f the largest in the wo, kepo- whelmingly in the lead. InCaSm; millions are discovering the :ncom- parable Camel quality - smo'th- ness and mellowness. If you want the o e ad oiy cigarette that's good to s uve mit strenuously from morn :. ---